Intelligence - fi
This can be broken down into several steps. The first step is using the planet's star's light for energy, thus making it possible to live on much more of a planet's surface. Photosynthesis evolved twice, with one form being very limited and little-known.
- Rhodopsin (purple) - addition to chemiosmotic energy metabolism
- Chlorophyll (green) - addition to electron-transfer energy metabolism
The rhodopsin kind is done by the Haloarchaea, some very salt-tolerant organisms.
The chlorophyll kind is done over the Bacteria, the ordinary bacteria / prokaryotes. Its evolution is rather complicated, with many organisms having only some of the complete photosynthetic apparatus of cyanobacteria ("blue-green algae"). But cyanobacteria use water as a hydrogen / electron source, and they release molecular oxygen. Cyanobacteria are not just free-living; they also live inside some eukaryotic cells as chloroplasts.
Turning to multicellularity, it evolved numerous times: plantlike, funguslike, slime-moldlike, but only once in animallike fashion. So might there be some world with lots of trees and mushrooms and the like but no animals?
Bodies of water are poor places to work with fire and electricity, so we must consider colonization of land. Animals have done so several times:
- Arthropods: insects, pillbugs, land crabs, arachnids, myriapods (centipedes, millipedes)
- Mollusks: land snails
- Annelids: earthworms, leeches
- Vertebrates: tetrapods, starting with real-life “Darwin Fish”
Plantlike organisms have done so only once, and I'm not sure about funguslike organisms.
Something helpful for being large on land is an internal skeleton, and that’s evolved once in animals (vertebrate skeletons), and at least once in plants (wood). Curiously, most animal skeletons are either external (shells), skin-surface (arthropod skins), or just under the skin (echinoderm skeletons). So it may be hard for an animal internal skeleton to evolve.
Grasping limbs and jaws have evolved multiple times, however.
Among land vertebrates, grasping with digits has evolved at least twice, in primates and in perching birds (Passeriformes). Arthropods have evolved pincer limbs at least twice (scorpions, various crustaceans). Tentacles have evolved at least twice, in cnidarians and in cephalopods, and arguably a third time in proboscideans (the elephant’s trunk).
Turning to jaws, vertebrate ones are modified front gill bars, while arthropod ones are modified limbs. Some polychaete worms also have jaws.
About sense organs, vertebrates and cephalopods have independently evolved high-resolution lens-camera eyes, and vertebrates and arthropods have independently evolved color vision.