An enduring interest of mine for nearly 40 years, has been comparative
studies of larvae of three endemic species of flies inhabiting transient rain pools
in tropical Africa (H. E. Hinton, 1968). In some ways, the most extraordinary of these
is the larva of the chironomid midge with the cumbersome name Polypedilum vanderplanki, originally brought
to our attention by H. E. Hinton (Hinton, 1951, 1968). What chiefly captured his imagination
was the ability of this complex metazoan life form to lose virtually all tissue
water and survive in a desiccated state, seemingly indefinitely. Called cryptobiosis,
this condition is so clearly an adaptation to the transient nature of its
habitat that it has lead to much bold conjecture. Especially relevant is the possibility
of us humans exploiting suspended animation for the exploration of space (Oleg et al., 2010), including the use of larvae to
seed life to alien worlds. A fertile imagination might go further and suggest
that the process of natural selection and evolution, starting with any ancestor
of man, would eventually lead to Homo
sapiens, and hence to the colonisation of space by man. This, essentially, is
the theory of Directed Panspermia championed by Francis Crick (Crick, 1982).
In a staff seminar I gave to the zoology department at my
university many years ago, I recall mentioning the Hinton/Crick hypothesis.
During the discussion that followed my paper, a senior colleague, Alec Panchen,
questioned the use of P. vanderplanki
as colonist for man on the ground that it could never have worked because P. vanderplanki is not an ancestor of H. sapiens. This seems a reasonable objection but is it correct? I will here attempt to show that it may not be because it ignores decomposition, among other things. The purpose of this essay is to return to Ale's comment. What
I wish to examine here is whether metazoa like P. vanderplanki larvae, under novel selective pressures encountered
on a strange world, could ever lead to the emergence of Homo sapiens. Because P.vanderplanki
is not an ancestor of man, this, at first sight will seem a nutty, even silly
idea. To discuss the point, I return to the concept of Directed Panspermia.
At the outset, to confine conjecture to manageable limits, I
greatly simplify the whole matter of seeding life elsewhere. In particular I adopt
Conway Morris’s simplifying assumption that the course of evolution is not
composed of infinite possibilities but instead, if rerun, will follow a similar
path ending every time at the same place. He confined his discussion to earth
but I am going to adopt the same reasoning for any planet suitable for life.
With these assumptions in place and limits in place we are ready to question the purpose
of any attempt to seed life elsewhere. There would seem to be two possible aims.
First, purely for reasons of intellectual curiosity – to spread that amazing
phenomenon ‘life’ where it is not yet present and where it might never originate
on it own. Such an intellectual basis finds strong appeal to man and might lead
to the seeding of life being attempted some day fairly soon. The possibility of seeding life elsewhere is not a trivial undertaking. Just because we can do it, should it be done? In fact I read today in Nature that it has already been done by seeding live tardigrades to the moon (Nature 2019). The purpose of this act is not given.
A second possibility is much more problematic, that is the
seeding undertaken in order to lead to the emergence of our species elsewhere.
Crick calls this Directed Panspermia. There seems a tacit assumption in both
the writing of Hinton on P. vanderplanki
and Crick that the desired result would be achieved whatever the details of
natural selection encountered. Let’s examine
this aim in more detail; it exposes some interesting difficulties.
First is the vexing question of the type of seed that should
be chosen for this bold venture. Despite science fiction stories, it is very
difficult, actually nearly impossible, for complex species like us to make the journey,
even within our own solar system. It would be much better to send some simple
organism capable of cryptobiosis, like P.
vanderplanki, rotifers, tradigrades, resurrection plants or bacteria. In
cryptobiosis they can travel vast distances in space and quickly take up active
life and adaptive radiation when suitable conditions return.
Whatever the seed chosen, whether bacteria as favoured by
Francis Crick or the metazoa and metaphyta listed above, whether ancestor of
man or not, there is something important that appears to have been overlooked.
I refer to decomposition, even if only by autolysis. What might decomposition
following inevitable death of seeds lead to? This is where things get
interesting because decomposition must lead to the release of DNA and RNA and possibly also to the release of the bases; adenine, guanine, cytosine and thymine which comprise the alphabet of DNA and RNA, the
common ancestors of all life on earth. These nucleic acids free in the oceans
of an empty world, in a ‘warm little pond’ or in volcanic fumaroles and so on,
open up the possibility of multiple lines of evolution and adaptive radiation parallel
to that of the original seed. Crick considers that any such free stating blocks
of life will be immediately destroyed by competition but this conclusion
applies to earth where conditions suitable for the origin of life no longer
exist. Such considerations do not apply on lifeless worlds wherever there are conditions
suitable for life. So we begin to see the possibility of a complex ecosystem eventually
emerging, with the parent seed evolving along with lines of evolution starting
with DNA/RNA. Therefore adding decomposition introduces a greatly inflated
range of evolutionary possibilities reducing the strength of Alec’s reasoning.
So P. vanderplanki might serve perfectly well as a seed
after all. Indeed, following this line of reasoning, do we need a living seed at all. Would not a simple package of DNA do?
One final point I wish to make is that, baring extinction, evolution does not
end with H. sapiens as we know it but is a stage in an ongoing evolutionary process. So, wherever man
evolves, on earth or on an alien world, might it lead to something that, from our present perspective, we would not
recognise or even like, such as the creature in the painting below by the
polish artist Zdzislaw Beksinski. This would certainly put a fly in the ointment of the
aims of Directed Panspermia.
references
Crick, F. (1982). Life Itself. Its Origin and Nature. London: Macdonald and Co.
Hinton, H. E. (1951). A new chironomid from Africa. Proceedings of the Zoological Society of
London., 121, 371-380.
Hinton, H. E. (1968). Reversible suspension of metabolism
and the origin of life. Proceedings of
the Royal Society, London (B). 171, 43-47.
Oleg, G., Tetsuya, S., Valdimir, S., Nataliya, N., Manabu,
S., Ludmila, M., et al. (2010). The
sleeping chironomid: an insect survived 18 months of exposure to outer space.
Paper presented at the 38th COSPAR Scientific Assembly., Bremen, Germany.
Nature (2019). Moon bears. Seven Days. 572, 289.
Nature (2019). Moon bears. Seven Days. 572, 289.
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