CHAPMAN, RUSSELL L.1*, CHARLES F. DELWICHE2, and RICHARD M. MCCOURT3. 1Department of Biological Sciences, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA, 70803-4110, USA; 2Department of Cell Biology and Molecular Genetics, University of Maryland, College Park, MD, 20742-5815, USA; 3Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia, PA, 19103, USA. - Green Algal Conquest of the Land: Many Conquests, One Victory?
Life on earth originated in a wet world and remained there for
millions of years until the first terrestrial invaders made their
initial forays into a new and unexploited terrestrial habitat.
Although cyanobacteria, and perhaps fungi as well, were important
participants in the conquest of the land, it was the evolution green
algae into the initial land plants that started amazing evolution and
diversification the terrestrial flora and fauna with which we are now
familiar. Given the paradigm that life arose in the sea, it is perhaps
surprising to find that freshwater green algae - not marine forms -
were the successful conquerors, i.e. the algae that gave rise to the
land plants. The first land colonizers were, of necessity, primary
producers (i.e. food for organisms that arrived or evolved later) and
were likely to have been cyanobacteria (blue-green algae), followed by
green algae (at least four separate invasions) and fungi, which also
made a successful assault on land together with algae in the form of
lichens. The symposium will survey recent studies on these groups and
their habitats, and describe how these colonizers changed and were
changed by adaptations to the new, dry world. It will explore the
question, Why did only one group of terrestrial green algae give rise
to the land plants? The success of these colonizers is relevant to all
subsequent terrestrial life (including ourselves), as well as the
search for extraterrestrial life, which, if it exists, is presumed to
have begun in an aquatic environment.
Key words: chlorophyta, evolution, green algae, land plants, molecular evolution, streptophyta