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Surely it was
serendipity when, just two years later, quarriers unearthed fossils of Archaeopteryx.
This creature, now recognized by many scientists as the first known bird, has a
mosaic of features that links it with the disparate groups of species on either
side of it in the fossil record: While its teeth, tail and overall body shape
are distinctly reptilian, its feathers have the same complex structure as the
lift-generating feathers of modern birds. In other words, it is just one of the
“numberless intermediate varieties” that
“It was the right
discovery at the right time,” says Richard Fortey, a paleontologist at the
Natural History Museum in
In many cases, that
critique still holds true: Researchers have yet to discover fossils of a
creature that fits in the gap between bats — which seem to appear suddenly in the fossil
record about 54 million years ago — and their mammalian predecessors (SN:
5/14/2005, p. 314). The gap in the fossil record between Archaeopteryx
and its reptilian ancestors also remains unoccupied, although several
discoveries of feathered dinosaurs in
Many of the gaps in
the fossil record that remained unfilled in Darwin’s time now throng with
creatures, such as the ones used to chronicle the 48-million–year series of
evolutionary changes between whales and their predecessors (SN: 9/22/01, p.
180; SN: 1/5/08, p. 5). And particular biomarkers — chemical
fossils, if you will — in rocks more than 240 million years old have provided
clues about the evolution of flowering plants (SN: 4/21/01, p. 253).
Paleontologists still
randomly stumble across transitional fossils these days, such as a creature
found in
As often as not,
however, transitional fossils are found when researchers head into the field
with a specific target in mind: By focusing on rocks deposited during an
interval where gaps in the fossil record exist, scientists can boost the
chances of making a critical discovery. That’s how researchers unearthed Tiktaalik,
a 2.7-meter–long beast that plopped into a 9-million–year gap in the chronicle
of vertebrates’ transition from water to land (SN: 6/17/06, p. 379).
Techniques such as CT
scanning, used to reinvestigate fossils collected decades ago, have revealed
new insights about the anatomy of semiaquatic creatures that preceded Tiktaalik.
Even genetic analyses of living creatures can provide insight into the fossil
record: The evolutionary changes observed in fossil fish deposited over a time
period of 20,000 years in an ancient lake can be linked to a particular gene
often studied in that species’ modern-day kin.
Amphibian enigma
Gaps in the fossil
record can be large in terms of time — sometimes many millions of years — and
in the extent of the evolutionary changes seen when comparing creatures before
and after the gap. When Archaeopteryx was discovered, for instance, the
fossil record was sparse and the disparity between known fossil reptiles and
birds was vast.
Until recently, the gap
in the fossil record separating frogs and salamanders from their amphibian
ancestors was similarly huge. About 290 million years ago, a diverse assemblage
of primitive amphibians walked the land, says Jason Anderson, a vertebrate
paleontologist at the
But in rocks
documenting the 50 million years or so that followed, amphibian fossils are few
and far between. Only in rocks deposited after 240 million years ago do such
fossils — and specifically, those of frogs and salamanders — appear. These two
groups of creatures are distinct both from each other and from their ancestors,
and they apparently evolved during an interval for which few fossils have been
discovered.
Recently, however,
A main clue is that
some of the bones in the first and second innermost toes on each of Gerobatrachus’
feet are fused together, a trait characteristic of salamanders but rarely found
in other creatures. Because some of the other bones in the fossil aren’t fully
developed, Anderson and his colleagues suggest that the creature was a
juvenile, indicating the fusion of the toe bones occurred even before adulthood
— a stronger sign that it betrays an evolutionary link to salamanders.
But like frogs, Gerobatrachus
has a broad skull and a shortened tail, the researchers reported last May in Nature.
The shape and configuration of bones in the creature’s skull, and particularly
those in its palate, are very froglike. Therefore, “this fossil seals the gap”
between primitive amphibians and the frogs and salamanders that evolved later,
On the amphibian
family tree, Gerobatrachus and its kin are ancestors to salamanders and
frogs, the researchers contend, and the evolutionary split between those two
groups probably occurred between 260 million and 270 million years ago.
Gerobatrachus was “quite advanced” compared with other
amphibians of its era, he adds. Another way to look at it, he notes, is to
consider the amphibians appearing 290 million years ago to be evolutionary
holdovers best representing species that first evolved long before.
Getting a foot on land
The series of gradual
anatomical changes that enabled semiaquatic creatures to completely leave the
water and conquer dry land is one of the most important chapters in the tale of
evolution. Among other changes, creatures had to develop limbs to support their
weight and develop a way to extract oxygen from the air.
“This whole transition
is known from quite a few [species],” says Neil Shubin, a paleontologist at the
Members of one species
considered to be an important part of the water-to-land transition, a
lobe-finned fish called Panderichthys, lived in what are now
He and his team struck
paleontological pay dirt with Tiktaalik, which lived about 382 million
years ago. Like some fish of the day, the animal had fleshy limbs that ended in
fins. But, like land-adapted tetrapods, it had sturdy ribs and a neck (SN
Online: 10/15/08). Its fossils also suggest that Tiktaalik had both
gills and lungs. Altogether, this blend of features spurred the researchers to
dub the creature a “fishapod.”
Fins fringing the end
of Tiktaalik’s protolimbs also include bones that are analogous to those
in human wrists and fingers. At the time Tiktaalik was found, scientists
hadn’t yet discovered similar bones in the fins of predecessors such as Panderichthys,
in part because that creature’s fossils are so fragmentary.
In the 1990s, analyses
of fossils of Panderichthys and the lobe-finned fish of their era didn’t
reveal bony features in the fins. Scientists interpreted this lack as a sign
that digits were an evolutionary novelty that only arose later in land-adapted
creatures such as Acanthostega, says Per Ahlberg, a vertebrate
paleontologist at
However, new analyses
of a near-complete specimen of Panderichthys — specifically, a CT scan
of a fossil still partially encased in rock — do in fact suggest that
those semiaquatic creatures had such bones after all, Ahlberg and colleagues
reported last year in Nature. And recent studies in other fish species
such as paddlefish and Australian lungfish suggest that a second wave of HOX
gene activity can occur during embryonic development in fish. To create a foot,
one of the key features of land vertebrates, Ahlberg notes, “all that evolution
did was reshape and repattern a structure that was already there.… It didn’t
have to build a novel extension of the body from scratch, so the transition
from fish to land vertebrate becomes a little less dramatic than we thought it
was.”
Hidden genes, big changes
Modern genetic tests
are also shedding light on evolutionary changes chronicled in the fossil record
of stickleback fish that lived about 10 million years ago in a lake that was in
an area now in west-central
Local topography and
geology suggest that the lake in question was several kilometers across and
that rivers flowing through the region occasionally provided a connection to
the Pacific Ocean, says Michael Bell, an evolutionary biologist at
At the beginning of
the interval, most of the sticklebacks living in this part of the lake had no
pelvic spines, but they did have the bony plate on which the spines are
attached. Only a few stickleback fossils had a full complement of pelvic
spines.
Then, about 4,000
years later, relatively sudden change came to the lake — possibly
because of some as-yet-unidentified environmental catastrophe — and the
sticklebacks that lacked pelvic spines were supplanted by those that did have
pelvic protection. For about 3,000 years, these spine-sporting fish dominated
the ecosystem, but then individuals that lacked pelvic spines began to account
for an ever-increasing portion of the stickleback population. Eventually, after
another 8,500 years or so, most of the sticklebacks in this part of the lake
again lacked pelvic spines.
A stickleback’s pelvic
spines, like other body parts, require an investment of energy to grow and
maintain. If not in danger from predators, an individual benefits if its
genetic makeup allows it to forgo those spines, says
Modern genetic studies
provide a clue, however. Scientists have identified at least six genes that
influence the presence and length of a stickleback’s pelvic spines. Most of
those genes have little effect, but one — a recessive gene known as PITX1
— has a significant influence. Not only that, in modern-day sticklebacks, as
the expression of the PITX1 gene declines, the spines on the creature’s
left side shorten more slowly than those on the right side.
That same pattern of
asymmetry shows up in this lake’s fossil record, says
Even before the
decline in growth of pelvic spines for the sticklebacks kicked in, however,
subtle evolutionary changes were taking place,
Genetic studies help
explain the changes seen in the fossil record but also offer a cautionary tale
for interpreting that record, says
The case of the
Plugging holes
Critics of evolution
delight in a simple irony: When paleontologists discover a creature that fills
one gap in the fossil record, they create yet another — one that precedes the
newly found intermediate species, and one that follows it. Much to
evolutionists’ delight, however, paleontologists have remained busy “creating
gaps in the fossil record” in recent years. Before the 1970s, scientists
discovered an average of 12 new dinosaur genera per decade; since 1990, the
rate of discovery has been 10 times higher. (SN: 11/20/04, p. 334).
But post-Darwin
discoveries haven’t been limited to large, lumbering land creatures: Scientists
have assembled several well-documented evolutionary lineages of foraminifera,
single-celled organisms whose distinctive and intricate shells help pin down
the era when sediments containing them were deposited. “This is on-the-ground
evidence that
And many stretches of
the fossil record poorly represented in Darwin’s day — such as the Precambrian,
an era before the Cambrian period (which began about 542 million years ago and
is when much of life’s diversity apparently evolved) — are now more thoroughly
populated. Fortey notes: “For
As such discoveries pour in, evolutionary trends almost invariably become clearer. “As you find more and more fossils, you close the gaps with more new species,” Fortey adds. In essence, the ever-increasing number of paleontological discoveries is converting a crude connect-the-dots sketch of evolution into a richly detailed pointillist painting.
Found in: Life and Paleontology
- Harder, B. 2001. New fossils resolve whale's origin. Science News 160(Sept. 22):180. Available at [Go to]
- Perkins, S. 2001. Rocks yield clues to flower origins. Science News 159(April 21):253. Available at [Go to]
- Perkins, S. 2001. A Ticklish debate. Science News 160(Aug. 18):106. Available at [Go to]
- Perkins, S. 2004. Plenty of dinosaurs yet to be found. Science News 166(Nov. 20):334 Available at [Go to]
- Perkins, S. 2005. Learning to listen. Science News 167 (May 14):314. Available at [Go to]
- Perkins, S. 2006. Amphibious ancestors. Science News 169(June 17):379. Available at [Go to]
- Anderson, J.S., et al. 2008. A stem batrachian from the Early Permian of Texas and the origin of frogs and salamanders. Nature 453(May 22):515.
- Boisvert, C.A., E. Mark-Kuric, and P.E. Ahlberg. In press. The pectoral fin of Panderichthys and the origin of digits. Nature.
- Bell, M., and M. Travis. 2008. How the stickleback lost its pelvis: Genes, natural selection, and a microstratigraphic sequence. Society of Vertebrate Paleontology meeting. Oct. 15-18. Cleveland.


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