Showing posts with label Horizontal Gene Transfer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Horizontal Gene Transfer. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Blurring the Lines: Carnivorous Plants and Photosynthetic Animals


There is a relatively simple dogma in a layperson's rules of biology concerning the difference in plants and animals. It is this: Plants make their own food. Animals do not. The resultant food chain or pyramid begins with food producers (plants) at the bottom and food consumers (animals) at all the layers above the producer layer. The difference between plant and animal is so categorically different, that they are organized by taxonomists into separate kingdoms...and there are only 5 (or 6) kingdoms of life. There is, of course, no overlap.

However, it really isn't that simple. First of all, there are plants out there that, in addition to using photosynthesis to make their own food, can capture and consume prey, albeit in a rudimentary fashion (some 630 species worldwide). Plants like the Venus Flytrap, Pitcher Plants, Flypaper Plants, Bladder Traps, Lobster-pot Traps, and other plants in a similar category (an additional 300 species) have evolved to flaunt such biological categorical dogma as the plant-animal divide. The existence of these plants proves that evolution by natural selection, one of the foundational laws of biology, knows no bounds or category and will capitalize on any naturally-existing phenomenon in order to gain some tangible advantage in survival. Although elm trees aren't hunting gazelles on some exotic savanna quite yet, the nature of these plants who behave like animals is nothing short of extraordinary. Want to know what is even crazier? You can OWN some of these plants as houseplants. That's right...you can flaunt biological dogma in your own living room.

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Horizontal Gene Transfer

Eastern Emerald Elysia - a sea slug. Photo by Patrick Krug of the
Encyclopedia or Life
Everyone knows the usual story of evolution. An organism wishes to pass on its genes to the next generation must do so by surviving and reproducing in a dynamic environment. It must evade predation, avoid the pitfalls associated with weather, find enough food to make it to the next day and convince a partner (if the organism reproduces sexually) to mate in order to pass on those genes. If the genes are well-suited to the context in which it evolved, then the next generation will be given the necessary tools to continue the same struggle. If the genes are not well-suited for some reason, or the environment or competition is too harsh, then the survival of the organism becomes questionable. This story works because of a mechanism we will call Vertical Gene Transfer (VGT). This is where genes are passed from parent to offspring through reproduction.

So, in light of this scientific truth, it may be surprising to know that VGT isn't the only game in town. There is a thing in the world called Horizontal Gene Transfer (HGT). Certain organisms are capable, it seems, of exchanging genes in ways that DO NOT involve the standard sexual or asexual reproduction model. There are several different ways in which HGT can happen: