
FISHY BLEND New fossils of an ancient, four-limbed creature help fill in the blanks of the evolutionary transition between fish and the first land-adapted vertebrates.P. Renne and P. Ahlberg
New fossils of an ancient, four-limbed creature help fill in
the blanks of the evolutionary transition between fish and the first
land-adapted vertebrates.
Fossils of creatures that span the water-to-land transition
of vertebrates are few and far between. One of those pioneers, Ventastega
curonica, was first described in 1994 but previously has been known only
from fragmentary remains unearthed from 365-million-year-old rocks at a site in
western Latvia.
Fossils found at the site during subsequent excavations now allow scientists to
more fully reconstruct the creature, says Per Ahlberg, a paleontologist at
Uppsala University in Sweden.
The new remains — including most of the creature’s skull,
the braincase, half of the bones in its forelimb and a quarter of its pelvic
girdle — suggest that Ventastega was an evolutionary intermediate
between Tiktaalik, a four-limbed fish that lived about 382 million years
ago (SN: 6/17/06, p. 379), and subsequent tetrapods such as Acanthostega,
which were capable of walking on land.
The size and proportions of the new fossils hint that Ventastega
probably measured between 1 and 1.3 meters in length. Most features of the
creature’s skull match those of Tiktaalik, which lived millions of years
earlier, but the overall shape of the skull and braincase “is
characteristically ‘early tetrapod,’” Ahlberg says. Likewise, the creature’s
lower jawbone was shaped like that of early tetrapods but was adorned with
fangs like those found in its fishy predecessors, he notes. “Ventastega
was a mosaic of features.”
Ventastega lived approximately during the same era as
Acanthostega, but its features were more primitive, a sign that Ventastega
may have been an evolutionary holdover, Ahlberg says. Nevertheless, the size
and shape of Ventastega’s limb bones, particularly those of its forelimbs,
suggest that the creature’s limbs ended in digits, not fins.
The fossil record suggests that the evolutionary transition
between fish and early tetrapods was smooth. Over millions of years, these
creatures’ eyes grew larger and their snouts became broader while the overall
size of the skull decreased somewhat, Ahlberg and his colleagues report in the
June 26 Nature.
The new fossils of Ventastega “are great,” says Neil
Shubin, a paleontologist at the University
of Chicago. Although the
newly described remains include just a few bones, “they’re very informative,”
he adds. The earliest tetrapods probably evolved between 5 million and 7
million years before Tiktaalik, he notes, and the new fossils will help
researchers predict what those creatures would have looked like.
Found in: Life and Paleontology
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