ABSTRACT

This book represents the first attempt to quantify environmental factors and life history traits that accelerate or decelerate species diversity in animals. About 15%, 8% and 77% of species are distributed in marine (70% of earth’s surface), freshwater (< 1%) and terrestrial (~ 29%) habitats. Hence, the terra firma fosters more diversity. The harsh hadal, desert and elevated montane habitats restrict diversity to 0.5-4.2%. Costing more time and energy, osmotrophic and suspension modes of food acquisition limit diversity to < 20%. In minor phyletics, evolution has proceeded from a ‘wrong combination’ of low motility and gonochorism to sessility and hermaphroditism. The motile major phyletics are more speciose (166,279 species/phylum) than the latter (1,975 species/phylum). As evolution and speciation are driven by motility, sessility is limited to 2.9% animals.

Selfing hermaphrodites (0.9%), parthenogens (< 0.6%) and clonals (~ 2%) miss meiosis and/or fertilization. Unable to tolerate them together, animals mutually eliminate parthenogenesis and hermaphroditism as well as parthenogenesis and cloning from each other. In clonals, colonial budding (94%) is more common than costlier fragmentation in solitary clonals. The newly proposed hypothesis explains that each stem cell plays an additive role and the required mass of stem cells differs for cloning and regeneration.

Incidence of heterogamety is four-times more in males than in females. Hence, evolution is more a male-driven process. Egg size is determined by environmental factors, but lecithality is genetically fixed. In poikilotherms, sex is also determined by gene(s), but differentiation by environmental factors. The extra-ovarian vitellogenesis (> 96%), spermatozoan (81%) rather than spermatophore mechanism of sperm transfer, promiscuity and polygamy over monogamy, iteroparity (99.6%) over semelparity and internal fertilization (84%) are preferred, as they accelerate diversity. Body size and egg size determine fecundity. Indirect life cycle (82%) and incorporation of feeding larval stages accelerate diversity. Brooding and viviparity (6.4%) decelerate it. Parasitism extends life span and liberates fecundity from eutelism.

Evolution is an ongoing process, and speciation and extinction are its unavoidable by-products. The in-built conservation mechanism of reviving life after a sleeping duration has been reduced from a few million years in microbial spores to a few thousand years in plant seeds and a few hundred years in dormant eggs in animals. Hence, animal conservation requires priority. The existence of temperature-resistant/insensitive individuals, strains and species shall flourish during the ongoing global warming and earth shall continue with such burgeoning species, hopefully inclusive of man.

chapter 1|13 pages

General Introduction

part A|46 pages

Environmental Factors

chapter 2|24 pages

Spatial Distribution

chapter 3|3 pages

Coevolution and Diversity

chapter 4|18 pages

Food and Feeding Modes

part B|196 pages

Life History Traits

part B1|51 pages

Sexuality

chapter 5|6 pages

Gonochorism and Males

chapter 6|18 pages

Hermaphroditism and Selling

chapter 7|9 pages

Parthenogenesis and Unisexualism

chapter 8|17 pages

Clonais and Stem Cells

part B2|86 pages

B2 Gametogenesis and Fertilization

chapter 9|8 pages

Mitosis and Meiosis

chapter 10|9 pages

Oogenesis and Vitellogenesis

chapter 11|5 pages

Spermatogenesis and Spermiogenesis

chapter 12|9 pages

Female- vs Male-Heterogamety

chapter 13|5 pages

Eutelism and Parasitism

chapter 14|10 pages

Monogamy and Polygamy

chapter 15|7 pages

Semelparity vs Itero parity

chapter 16|12 pages

Spawning and Oviposition

chapter 17|6 pages

Fertilization Success

chapter 18|13 pages

Fecundity

part B3|58 pages

Embryogenesis and Development

chapter 19|5 pages

Direct and Indirect Life Cycles

chapter 20|8 pages

Brooding and Viviparity

chapter 21|13 pages

Feeding and Non-feeding Larvae

chapter 22|9 pages

Parasites and Hosts

chapter 23|13 pages

Sex Determination and Differentiation

chapter 24|9 pages

Metamorphosis and Recruitment

part C|28 pages

Past, Present and Future

chapter 25|5 pages

Message from Fossils

chapter 26|14 pages

Conservation

chapter 27|8 pages

Climate Change