The Origin of Phototrophy Reveals the Importance of Priority Effects for Evolutionary Innovation

Preprint
Article
Version 1
This version is not peer-reviewed

The Origin of Phototrophy Reveals the Importance of Priority Effects for Evolutionary Innovation

Version 1
: Received: 25 November 2020 / Approved: 27 November 2020 / Online: 27 November 2020 (16:52:24 CET)

How to cite:
Burnetti, A.; Ratcliff, W. The Origin of Phototrophy Reveals the Importance of Priority Effects for Evolutionary Innovation. Preprints 2020, 2020110700 (doi: 10.20944/preprints202011.0700.v1).

Burnetti, A.; Ratcliff, W. The Origin of Phototrophy Reveals the Importance of Priority Effects for Evolutionary Innovation. Preprints 2020, 2020110700 (doi: 10.20944/preprints202011.0700.v1).

Cite as:

The history of life on Earth has been shaped by a series of major evolutionary innovations. While some of these innovations occur repeatedly (e.g., multicellularity), some of the most important evolutionary innovations (e.g., the origin of life itself, eukaryotes, or the genetic code) are evolutionary singularities, arising just once in the history of life. This historical fact has often been interpreted to mean that singularities are particularly difficult, low-probability evolutionary events, thus making the long-term course of life on Earth highly contingent on their chance appearances. Alternatively, singularities may arise from evolutionary priority effects, where first-movers suppress independent origins. In this paper, we disentangle these hypotheses by examining a distinctive innovation: phototrophy. The ability to use light to generate metabolic energy evolved twice, preserving information about the evolution of rare, transformative innovations that is lost in singularities. We show that the two forms of phototrophy occupy opposite ends of several key trade-offs: efficiency of light capture vs. return on investment in photosynthetic infrastructure, dependence on limiting nutrients vs. metabolic versatility, and complexity vs. simplicity. Our results suggest that phototrophy is a ‘dual singularity’ because phototrophic niche space is too large for the first mover to fully suppress future innovation, but not so large as to support many innovations. While often ignored over geological time scales, ecological interactions, in particular the potential for direct competition and priority effects, plays a fundamental role in the tempo and mode of major evolutionary innovations.

Subject Areas

photosynthesis; phototrophy; priority effects

Not displayed online.

Mathematical equations can be typed in either LaTeX formats \\[ … \\] or $$ … $$, or MathML format <math> … </math>. Try the LaTeX or MathML example.

Type equation: Preview:

Optionally, you can enter text that should appear as linked text:

Please enter or paste the URL to the image here (please only use links to jpg/jpeg, png and gif images):

Type author name or keywords to filter the list of references in this group (you can add a new citation under Bibliography):
No existing citations in Discussion Group

Wikify editor is a simple editor for wiki-style mark-up. It was written by MDPI for Sciforum in 2014. The rendering of the mark-up is based on Wiky.php with some tweaks. Rendering of mathematical equations is done with MathJax. Please send us a message for support or for reporting bugs.

Renew

Comments must follow the standards of professional discourse and should focus on the scientific content of the article. Insulting or offensive language, personal attacks and off-topic remarks will not be permitted. Comments must be written in English. Preprints reserves the right to remove comments without notice. Readers who post comments are obliged to declare any competing interests, financial or otherwise.

We encourage comments and feedback from a broad range of readers. See criteria for comments and our diversity statement.