chromista engulfee

You, a rhodophyte, are consumed by a non-synthesizing-chromista, and to everyone’s surprise, you doesn’t die, but you both live happily ever after. The chromista provides you with chemicals, and you convert those, via sunlight, to sugar for it. Marvellous. You’re a little engine living right inside it. Amazingly, you also have little engines living inside you[1].

The chlorophyll your brought helped the chromista a lot, but it could still be improved. For example, it doesn’t work in deep water, where the sunlight is reduced.

Another of those little copy errors could make a different kind of chlorophyll that works better in the deep ocean and gives you the opportunity to colonise areas where nothing lives at the moment. But that will mean having less of the tried-and-tested chlorophyll that works so well near the surface.

Call me Nemo

I like paddling

 


[1] This is the only time that this sort of engulfing event seems to have happened: a eukarypte has engulfed another eukaryote, rather than a simpler prokaryote. That means that the original eukaryote already had its own, smaller, engulfees, like a Russian Doll.

We can be sure that it happened this way, because the resulting organelle has four membranes, where all the others have two.

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