China Daily (Hong Kong)

Chinese fish fossil sheds light on jaw evolution

- By REUTERS in Washington

A bottom-dwelling, mud-grubbing, armored fish that swam in tropical seas 423 million years ago is fundamenta­lly changing the understand­ing of the evolution of an indisputab­ly indispensa­ble anatomical feature: the jaw.

Scientists said on Thursday that they unearthed in China’s Yunnan province fossils of a primordial fish called

Qilinyu rostrata that was about 30 centimeter­s long and possessed the telltale bones present in modern vertebrate jaws, including in people.

Qilinyu was part of an extinct fish group called placoderms, clad in bony armor covering the head and much of the body and boasting jaws armed with bony plates that acted as teeth to slice and dice prey.

Fish were Earth’s first vertebrate­s when they appeared more than half a billion years ago, but they were primitive and jawless, with suckerlike mouths.

Placoderms were the first vertebrate­s with jaws, a pivotal evolutiona­ry advance that enabled them to grasp prey, but they had no teeth. Teeth appeared for the first time in later fish.

Qilinyu had three bones, the dentary, maxilla and premaxilla, that characteri­ze the modern vertebrate jaw seen in bony fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals.

Scientists long viewed plac- oderms as a fascinatin­g evolutiona­ry dead end. But the fossils of Qilinyu and another placoderm called Entelognat­hus that also possessed the three bones indicate that the elements of the modern jaw first appeared in placoderms.

The maxilla and premaxilla are bones of the upper jaw. The dentary is a bone of the lower jaw.

It appears they evolved from the bony plates that placoderms used to sheer flesh in lieu of teeth, said paleontolo­gist Per Ahlberg of Sweden’s Uppsala University, who helped lead the study published in the journal Science.

“In us, the lower jaw is made entirely from the dentary. Most of the upper jaw is composed from the maxilla, but the bit that carries the incisor teeth is the premaxilla,” Ahlberg said.

 ?? REUTERS ?? The fish called Qilinyu lived 423 million years ago.
REUTERS The fish called Qilinyu lived 423 million years ago.

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