Evolution: strange animals don't have to eat: (Introduction)

by David Turell @, Thursday, October 05, 2023, 19:54 (414 days ago) @ David Turell

Acoels use symbiosis with algae:

https://phys.org/news/2023-10-tiny-solar-powered-animals.html

"Animals and plants need energy. Some animals get energy by eating other animals, and many plants harvest the energy in sunlight through photosynthesis. However, in the ocean, there exists a remarkable group of small, worm-like animals called acoels that do both; some acoels form relationships (symbiosis) with single-celled, photosynthetic microalgae.

"A study by Assistant Professor Kevin Wakeman and his undergraduate student, Siratee Riewluang, at Hokkaido University, Japan, has shed some light on the biodiversity underpinning symbiotic relationships between acoels and microalgae.

"Acoels are superficially simple. However, this simplicity is misleading. Due to their regenerative ability and position as one of the first animal groups on the planet, acoels interest biologists in the fields of evolutionary biology, regenerative biology, and neurobiology. Some acoels also form symbiotic relationships with microalgae. This includes green algae and other types of microalgae that also associate with coral reefs called dinoflagellates.

"'These acoels engulf microalgae seemingly as 'food,' but they do not digest them. Instead, they store them below their outer surface. They create energy using sunlight—much like adding solar panels to your house," explained Siratee.

***

"Unexpectedly, Wakeman and Siratee came across what might turn out to be a whole new group of acoels harboring symbionts (only one group is currently known).

"'We found that there was more diversity of acoels and their symbionts than we really expected," said Wakeman. "Even in this present dataset, which focuses on Japan, it's clear that there are fascinating interactions between acoels and microalgae. These results will lay the groundwork for future studies that can tease apart what are probably some interesting ecological mechanisms. I really am excited to see where this ends up."

"Wakeman and Siratee will continue work on photosynthetic acoels for Siratee's Master's degree.

"'It would be cool to figure out if they really are a new group of acoels with symbionts, but we need more genetic data and unambiguous morphological data to confidently assign a new name," said Siratee."

Comment: so, it is not a fully a dog-eat-dog world. Photosynthesis mitigates the problem for dhw.


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