Why O2 Is Required by Complex Life on Habitable Planets and the Concept of Planetary "Oxygenation Time"

Biology

Scientific paper

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Oxygen, Complex Life, Atmospheric, Redox, Biomass Spectra

Scientific paper

Life is constructed from a limited toolkit: the Periodic Table. The reduction of oxygen provides the largest free energy release per electron transfer, except for the reduction of fluorine and chlorine. However, the bonding of O2 ensures that it is sufficiently stable to accumulate in a planetary atmosphere, whereas the more weakly bonded halogen gases are far too reactive ever to achieve significant abundance. Consequently, an atmosphere rich in O2 provides the largest feasible energy source. This universal uniqueness suggests that abundant O2 is necessary for the high-energy demands of complex life anywhere, i.e., for actively mobile organisms of ~10-1-100 m size scale with specialized, differentiated anatomy comparable to advanced metazoans. On Earth, aerobic metabolism provides about an order of magnitude more energy for a given intake of food than anaerobic metabolism. As a result, anaerobes do not grow beyond the complexity of uniseriate filaments of cells because of prohibitively low growth efficiencies in a food chain. The biomass cumulative number density, n, at a particular mass, m, scales as n (>m)~m-1 for aquatic aerobes, and we show that for anaerobes the predicted scaling is n~m -1.5, close to a growth-limited threshold. Even with aerobic metabolism, the partial pressure of atmospheric O2 (PO2) must exceed ~103 Pa to allow organisms that rely on O2 diffusion to evolve to a size ~10-3 m. PO2 in the range ~103-104 Pa is needed to exceed the threshold of ~10-2 m size for complex life with circulatory physiology. In terrestrial life, O2 also facilitates hundreds of metabolic pathways, including those that make specialized structural molecules found only in animals. The time scale to reach PO2 ~104 Pa, or "oxygenation time," was long on the Earth (~3.9 billion years), within almost a factor of 2 of the Sun's main sequence lifetime. Consequently, we argue that the oxygenation time is likely to be a key rate-limiting step in the evolution of complex life on other habitable planets. The oxygenation time could preclude complex life on Earth-like planets orbiting short-lived stars that end their main sequence lives before planetary oxygenation takes place. Conversely, Earth-like planets orbiting long-lived stars are potentially favorable habitats for complex life.

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