Here's the opening paragraphs from a news item on the National Geographic website ["First Sex" Found in Australian Fossils?].
Sex is part of the "oldest profession" and often called the subject of the "world's oldest joke." Now scientists think they've found evidence of the oldest known creatures to engage in sexual reproduction.This is an example of bad science writing. Sexual reproduction is a phenomenon seen in many bacteria and in all eukaryotes (with minor exceptions). Animals are not the only eukaryotes that have sex. Plants, do it; fungi do it; and so do all single-cell eukaryotes.
A new study suggests that nature's first sexual encounter took place among tubular invertebrates called Funisia dorothea, which lived about 565 million years ago.
The ancestors of these tube worms were having sex for at least a billion years before the Neoproterozoic. The idea that these organisms were "nature's first sexual encounter" is silly.
Who is responsible for this misrepresentation of the evolution of sex? The paper by Droser and Gehling (2008) was published in Science last week. The only reference to sex in the peer-reviewed paper is the following ....
The branching patterns and rarity of branching of Funisia is consistent with metazoan asexual budding. The consistency of tube widths on individual bedding surfaces (Fig. 1, A, I, and J), the densely packed nature of the attachment structures, and the clustering pattern of developmental stages of attachment structures on individual bedding planes suggests that the juveniles settled as aggregates in a series of limited cohorts.There's nothing in the paper about these organisms being the first to reproduce sexually—that wouldn't have survived the reviews. The only remaining question is why did the author (Droser) allow herself to be quoted in a press release when she must have known that it was misrepresenting the paper?
These solitary organisms thus exhibit growth by addition of serial units to tubes and by the division of tubes, and dispersed propagation by the production of spats. Among living organisms, spat production is almost ubiquitously the result of sexual reproduction but is known to occur rarely in association with asexual reproduction (8). Hence, despite its morphological simplicity the Neoproterozoic F. dorothea provides evidence of a variety of growth modes and a complex arrangement for the propagation of new individuals. In living organisms, synchronous aggregate growth may result from a variety of factors—including response to competition, sediment disturbance, and heterogeneity of the substrate—and has the advantage of reducing competition for space between clones and can also decrease gamete wastage (9, 10).
Droser, M.L. and Gehling, J.G. (2008) Synchronous Aggregate Growth in an Abundant New Ediacaran Tubular Organism. Science 319:1660-1662. DOI: 10.1126/science.1152595
The only remaining question is why did the author (Droser) allow herself to be quoted in a press release when she must have known that it was misrepresenting the paper?
ReplyDeleteMaybe that's what she really believes, but knew reviewers would barf on it if she actually spoke her mind.
Most likely the author never saw the press release. The few times I have been quoted in the press the quotes deviate from what I actually said (sometimes substantially). Similar errors have occurred for press releases I have seen. It is possible (likely?) that the press agents for Science did not request or even allow author approval of the final press release.
ReplyDeleteLarry wrote: "Sexual reproduction is a phenomenon seen in many bacteria..."
ReplyDeleteThis is only true if we define 'sex' as 'any process that can produce new genetic combinations'. Is that what you meant?
Science daily has quoted Droser as saying "In Funisia, we are very likely seeing sexual reproduction in Earth's early ecosystem -- possibly the very first instance of sexual reproduction in animals on our planet."
ReplyDeletehttp://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/03/080320150025.htm
NG took a cue from that I think.