Leonardo’s Mountain of Clams and the Diet of Worms (50 page)

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Dinoflagellates do, however,
kill
fish, by indirect mechanisms long known and well studied for their immense practical significance. Under favorable conditions, dinoflagellate populations can soar to 60 million organisms per liter of water. These so-called blooms can discolor and poison the waters—“red tide” is the most familiar example—leading
to massive deaths of fish and other marine organisms.
J. M. Burkholder and a group of her colleagues from North Carolina State University have studied toxic blooms associated with fish kills in estuaries of the southeastern United States. The largest event resulted in the death of nearly one million Atlantic menhaden in the estuary of the Pamlico River. The oddity of this case lies not in the
killing of fish per se, a common consequence of dinoflagellate blooms. We have always regarded the deaths of fishes and other marine organisms during red tides as passive and “unintended” results of dinoflagellate toxins, or other consequences of massive algal populations during blooms. No one had supposed that dinoflagellates might actively kill fish as an evolved response for their own explicit
advantage, including a potential nutritional benefit for the algal cells. And yet the dinoflagellates do seem to be killing and eating fishes in a manner suggesting active evolution for this most peculiar reversal.
The dinoflagellate lives in a dormant state, lying on the sea floor within a protective cyst. When live fish approach, the cyst breaks and releases a mobile cell that swims, grows,
and secretes a powerful, water-soluble neurotoxin, killing the fish. So far, so what?—though the presence of fish does seem to induce activity by the dinoflagellate (breaking of the cyst), thus suggesting a direct link. Anatomical and behavioral evidence both suggest that dinoflagellates have actively evolved their strategy for feeding on fishes. The swimming cell, breaking out from the cyst, grows
a projection, called a peduncle, from its lower surface. The cells seem to move actively toward dead or dying fishes. Flecks of tissue, sloughed off from the fish, then become attached to the peduncle and get digested. The authors describe this reversal at maximum disparity in size among my four cases:
The lethal agent is an excreted neurotoxin. [It] induces neurotoxic signs by fish including
sudden sporadic movement, disorientation, lethargy and apparent suffocation followed by death. The alga has not been observed to attack fish directly. It rapidly increases its swimming velocity to reach flecks of sloughed tissue from dying fish, however, using its peduncle to attach to and digest the tissue debris.
4. S
PONGES AND ARTHROPODS.
Among invertebrates, sponges rank as the lowest of
the low (the bottom rung of any evolutionary ladder), while arthropods stand highest of the high (just a little lower than the angels, that is, just before vertebrates on a linear list of rising complexity). Sponges have no discrete organs; they feed by filtering out tiny items of food from water pumped through channels in their body. Arthropods grow eyes, limbs, brains, and digestive systems; many
live as active carnivores. Most arthropods wouldn’t take much notice of a lowly sponge, but we can scarcely imagine how or why a sponge might subdue and ingest an arthropod.
However, in a 1995 article, crisply titled “Carnivorous Sponges,” J. Vacelet and N. Boury-Esnault of the Centre d’Oceanologie of Marseille have found a killer sponge (about as bizarre as a fish-eating dinoflagellate—but both
exist). Relatives of this sponge, members of the genus
Asbestopluma
, have only been known from very deep waters (including the all-time record for sponges at more than 25,000 feet), where behavior and food preferences could not be observed. But Vacelet and Boury-Esnault found a new species in a shallow-water Mediterranean cave (less than one hundred feet), where scuba divers can watch directly.
The deep sea is a nutritional desert, and many organisms from such habitats develop special adaptations for procuring large and rare items (while relatives from shallow waters may pursue a plethora of smaller prey).
Asbestopluma
has lost both filtering channels through the body and the specialized cells (called choanocytes) that pump the water through. So how does this deep-water sponge feed?
The new species grows long filaments that extend out from the upper end of the body. A blanket of tiny spicules, or small skeletal projections, covers the surface of the filaments. The authors comment: “The spicule cover . . . gives the filaments a ‘Velcro’-like adhesiveness”—the key to this feeding reversal at maximal anatomical distance for invertebrates. The sponge captures small crustaceans on
the filaments—and they can’t escape any more than a fuzz ball can detach itself from the Velcro lining of your coat pocket. The authors continue: “New, thin filaments grew over the prey, which was completely enveloped after one day and digested within a few days.” The sponge, in other words, has become a carnivore.
Four fascinating stories to give us pause about our preconceptions, particularly
our dualistic taxonomies based on the domination of one category over another. The little guys sometimes turn tables and prevail—often enough, perhaps, to call the categories themselves into question.
I see another message in these reversals—a consequence of the reassessment that must always proceed when established orders crumble, or merely lose their claim to invariance. In our struggle to
understand the history of life, we must learn where to place the boundary between contingent and unpredictable events that occur but once and the more repeatable, lawlike phenomena that may pervade life’s history as generalities. (In my own view of life, the domain of contingency looms vastly larger than all Western tradition, and most psychological hope, would allow. Fortuity pervades the origin
of any particular species or lineage.
Homo sapiens
is a contingent twig, not a predictable result of ineluctably rising complexity during evolution—see the end of chapter 15 for Darwin’s view on this issue.)
The domain of lawlike generality includes broad phenomena not specific to the history of particular lineages. The ecological structure of communities should provide a promising searching
ground, for some principles of structural organization must transcend the particular organisms that happen to occupy a given role at any moment. I imagine, for example, that all balanced ecosystems must sustain more biomass as prey than as predators—and I would accept such statements as predictable generalities, despite my affection for contingency. I would also have been willing to embrace the invariance
of other rules for sensible repetition—that single-celled creatures don’t kill and eat large multicellular organisms, for example. But these four cases of reversed order give me pause.
In a famous passage from the
Origin of Species
, Charles Darwin extolled the invariance of certain ecological patterns by using observed repetition in independent colonizations to argue against a range of contingently
unpredictable outcomes:
When we look at the plants and bushes clothing an entangled bank, we are tempted to attribute their proportional numbers and kinds to what we call chance. But how false a view is this! Every one has heard that when an American forest is cut down, a very different vegetation springs up; but it has been observed that the trees now growing on the ancient Indian mounds, in
the Southern United States, display the same beautiful diversity and proportion of kinds as in the surrounding virgin forests. What a struggle between the several kinds of trees must here have gone on during long centuries, each annually scattering its seeds by the thousand; what war between insect and insect—between insects, snails, and other animals with birds and beasts of prey—all striving to
increase, and all feeding on each other or on the trees or their seeds and seedlings, or on the other plants which first clothed the ground and thus checked the growth of the trees! Throw up a handful of feathers, and all must fall to the ground according to definite laws; but how simple is this problem compared to the action and reaction of the innumerable plants and animals which have determined,
in the course of centuries, the proportional numbers and kinds of trees now growing on the old Indian ruins!
But the same patterns do not always recur from adjacent starting points colonized by the same set of species. Even the most apparently predictable patterns of supposedly established orders may fail. Remove the lobsters from waters around one South African island, and a new equilibrium
may quickly emerge—one that actively excludes lobsters by converting their former prey into a ganging posse of predators!
Thus, I sense a challenge in these four cases, a message perhaps deeper than the raw peculiarity of their phenomenology—and the resulting attack upon our dualistic and hierarchical categories. We do not yet know the rules of composition for ecosystems. We do not even know
if rules exist in the usual sense. I am tempted, therefore, to close with the famous words that D’Arcy Thompson wrote to signify our ignorance of the microscopic world (
Growth and Form
, 1942 edition). We are not quite so uninformed about the rules of composition for ecosystems, but what a stark challenge and what an inspiration to go forth: “We have come to the edge of a world of which we have
no experience, and where all our preconceptions must be recast.”
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