Part 14
Chapter 6 - Missing Link, What Do You Mean Missing? ...continued
Up From The Sea One of the most amazing transitions in the history of life was the emerging of animals from the oceans. How a creature moves and breathes is so different in the two environments that radical shifts are required in almost all parts of the body.
There was a time when everything - plant and animal life -lived in the sea and then, at various points in evolutionary history creatures have succeeded in making the dangerous trek out of life's watery tomb. Fortunately the transitional stages of our exodus as fish emerged onto dry land, and the later trek back to water by the ancestors of whales, are beautifully documented in the fossil record. Fish-world can conveniently be divided in two; ray-finned fishes (every fish you have ever seen that isn’t a shark) and lobe-finned fish who have fins more like legs as we shall see shortly. Lobefins in the sea today have dwindled to the lungfishes and coelacanths. On land they have prospered; all land vertebrates including humans are aberrant lungfish.
It was believed that coelacanths were long since extinct, known only from 200 million year old fossils. Then in 1938 a South African trawler man caught one in his nets. Biologist J.L.B. Smith who examined it said “I would not have been more surprised if I had seen a dinosaur walking down the street”.
Coelacanths are closer cousins to us than they are to most fish. Nevertheless we are not descended from lungfish, we share a common ancestor with them that would have looked more like them than it looked like us. To find this ancestor we need to look at the part of the fossil record known as Romer’s gap, named after American palaeontologist A.S. Romer. The gap stretches from the end of the Devonian 360 million years ago when fish ruled the oceans, to the early Carboniferous 340 million years ago when amphibians, often gigantic ones, roamed the swamps.
In recent years some amazing finds have bridged this gap…..
Some of what follows is taken from "Your Inner Fish" by Neil Shubin.
In 1925 a Canadian farmer called Joseph Landry shipped a crate of fossils to the Swedish museum of natural history Packed inside was a superb half-metre long specimen of Eusthenopteron, virtually complete and preserved in three-dimensions, a fish that died 380 million years ago, but in appearance not much different from one lying on a fishmonger's slab. Landry, who collected fish fossils for the museum on commission, was paid $50 for this specimen.
Erik Jarvik took decades to examine the specimen grinding it down a fraction of a millimetre at a time mapping the conduit of nerves and blood vessels and the position and shape of glands, organs and braincase. From the 40’s through to the 90’s Jarvik published a series of papers on his findings. He showed that the skull matches closely those of early amphibians and that the teeth had features that are also present in primitive tetrapods.
The front fin was supported by bones identifiable as a humerus, ulna and radius, and the rear fins by a femur, fibula and tibia. Clearly, the fins of Eusthenopteron contained the bones of the paired limbs of all tetrapods, although bones distal to a wrist or ankle are not present. More than 2000 specimens of Eusthenopteron have been collected from the same location at the Miguasha cliffs. These were surface-hunting fish and probably never came onto the land but clear progress was evident towards an amphibian body plan.
Nearer the amphibian side of the gap 20 million years later comes Ichthyostega discovered in Greenland in 1932 and buried there in the days when Greenland was at the equator. Ichthy looked more like a giant salamander, it lived mostly in the water and probably made occasional forays onto land. It had the flat head so characteristic of amphibians and the same; big bone – two thinner bones – lots of little bones – digits; layout of it’s limbs. One obvious difference was its seven toes instead of what became the standard set of five.
Another exciting discovery from Greenland from the same period was Acanthostega. It too had a flat amphibian like skull and tetrapod-like limbs but it had opted for eight digits. It too was mainly a water-dweller but it had lungs and could cope with land when necessary.
The fascinating story of its discovery by Jenny Clack the "Diva of the Devonian" is recounted in this excellent BBC documentary that was part of the "Beautiful Minds" series.
... All of these “links” can roughly be described as amphibian-like fish or fish-like amphibians.
A team of scientists from the University of Pennsylvania led by Neil Shubin set out to bridge the remaining gap.
He studied the geological maps for the right kind of rocks from the correct period and found a likely candidate at Ellesmere Island in northern Canada. For four arctic summers he and his colleagues searched and found a few tantalising clues but nothing definitive. In the fourth year of the expedition, the last one his sponsor was going to fund, he found one of the most important fossils in all of history.
If you were asked to sketch the perfect transitional creature between a fish and a reptile you could not do better than Titkaalik. It’s got a crocodile-like head on a salamander’s trunk attached to a fish rear end with a tail. Unlike any fish it also had a neck! If you were asked to draw the perfect intermediate creature between a fish and an amphibian you could not come up with anything better than Titkaalik. It’s leg bones follow the tetrapod model and there is even evidence of muscle attachments for substantial pecs. This was a fish that could do push-ups! And it was discovered in rock of exactly the right age; evolution can make scientific predictions!
The story of life's transition from water to land is wonderfully preserved in the fossil record. The development of all sorts of anatomical features has been preserved with the sort of detail we have no right to expect.
Below is an illustration of the evolution of the structure of tetrapod limbs taken from the NCSE website.
Coming next - back to the sea ...