What is the first animal on earth

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What is the first animal on earth
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What is the first animal on earth
Dickinsonia is one of the most iconic and best-studied organisms of the Ediacaran biota. Credit: Verisimilus

For 70 years, scientists have debated whether Dickinsonia—a flat, oval and striated creature up to almost a metre and a half long—was an animal, a lichen or a giant protozoa, or if it belonged to another biologically-different category, perhaps extinct today. The first fossil was discovered in 1947 in Australia, becoming one of the most iconic and best-studied organisms of the Ediacaran biota, to the point that several different species have been identified.

In September 2018, a study in the journal Science was able to characterise the fossil lipids present in several specimens of Dickinsonia found in north-western Russia, discovering that cholesterol, a typical animal fat, was abundant. The results mean that this creature that lived 558 million years ago is the oldest confirmed representative of terrestrial fauna. The researchers further concluded that: “the Ediacaran biota was indeed a prelude to the Cambrian explosion of animal life.”

Aspidella

What is the first animal on earth
Aspidella discs on the Fermeuse Formation near Ferryland, Newfoundland. Credit: Martin Smith

When in 1868 the Scottish geologist Alexander Murray discovered in Newfoundland, Canada some small disc-shaped markings in the rock, he could not imagine that he was opening an unknown primal chapter of the history of life on Earth. However, four years later, the palaeontologist Elkanah Billings proposed the idea that the strange circles were actually fossils, a suggestion that was dismissed at the time since they had been found in Precambrian rocks. Instead, it was argued that they had been formed by chemical deposits or gas bubbles.

Almost a century would pass before there was a general recognition of the existence of macroscopic life prior to the Cambrian. Murray’s discs, together with others in different places, were assigned to the species Aspidella terranovica, but this case illustrates the current confusion about the reality of the Ediacaran biota: fossils initially identified as cnidarians (jellyfish) and classified as Aspidella and other genera, were probably not disc-shaped organisms, but rather the imprints of rhizoids—protuberances by which different creatures with the appearance of fronds are anchored to the substrate. On the other hand, fossil prints similar to those left by anemones have also been found with Aspidella, which would support their classification as cnidarians. In short, uncertainty abounds.

Charnia

What is the first animal on earth
The best known example of a Charnia masoni fossil in the geology section of the New Walk Museum. Credit: Ashley Dace

The Ediacaran seabed on which Dickinsonia crawled was populated by a variety of fern-like lifeforms anchored to the bottom. One of those organisms was Charnia, the first confirmed fossil that came from rocks prior to the Cambrian period, and therefore the one that formally inaugurated the study of the Ediacaran biota.

After its discovery in England in 1958, its appearance of leaves with alternate branches, up to two metres long, suggested that it was a type of algae. However, when it was learned that it lived in waters too deep to carry out photosynthesis, it was reclassified as a pennatulacean, a group of modern animals related to corals. This hypothesis has also been refuted, and today Charnia is still a mystery. Its classification has been proposed in a tentative group called Vendobionta, a possible biological kingdom separate from the current ones that lived during the Ediacaran period and died with it.

Kimberella

What is the first animal on earth
The more than 1,000 fossils of Kimberella found have allowed to understand in great detail its anatomy. Credit: Masahiro Miyasaka

Like Dickinsonia, Kimberella was probably an animal that inhabited the terrestrial seas 555 million years ago. The bilateral symmetry of its body has led some scientists to propose that current species have inherited this basic plan of organization from our distant ancestors in the Ediacaran biota.

Originally described in 1966, Kimberella was at first identified as a jellyfish. However, in 1997 more detailed studies of its structure and what looked like marks of a radula (toothed tongue) suggests that it should be classified as an ancestor mollusc of modern marine slugs, which possibly fed by scraping off the microbes present on the surface over which it moved. The more than 1,000 fossils found, up to 15 centimetres in length, have allowed scientists to understand in great detail the anatomy of its body, possibly covered by a soft shell, and have even led to speculation about its ecology and habits.

Andiva

What is the first animal on earth
Andiva was probably covered by a thin soft shell. Credit: Aleksey Nagovitsyn

The rich sets of fossils found in at least 25 Ediacaran sites around the world conjures up images of a panorama of sea bottoms where different flattened life forms crept or crawled in search of their sustenance. Along with Dickinsonia, another of those prehistoric mat-like creatures was Andiva, an organism up to 10 centimetres long whose body was probably covered by a thin soft shell. The same study that discovered the abundance of cholesterol in Dickinsonia did not achieve such clear results when analysing Andiva fossils, but its anatomical characteristics suggest that this contemporary of Kimberella was probably also an animal.

Funisia

What is the first animal on earth
Funisia dorothea in a fossil excavated in South Australia. Credit: Droser lab, UC Riverside

Within the variety of life forms of the Ediacaran Period, Funisia represents the worms. The worm is not a biological taxonomy, but simply describes a heterogeneous group of animals that have in common a cylindrical shape and a soft body without limbs. Funisia may have been one of the inventors of this bodily organization. First described in 2008, it lived in colonies where it is suspected that it reproduced sexually, which would make it the oldest example yet found of this method of reproduction in an animal. Its classification has not yet been clearly determined, although it has been proposed that it could belong to the group of porifera (sponges) or cnidarians.

Javier Yanes

@yanes68