China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Earliest known common ancestor sprouted huge family tree

- Chris Davis New York Journal Contact the writer at chrisdavis@chinadaily­usa. com.

It’s been said that the ancient Greek philosophe­r Aristotle invented Western science by having his students collect sea shells on the beach and then sort them by their features, looking for connection­s.

If that’s true, his helpers would surely be scratching their heads over the remains of some critters just unearthed in China.

Researcher­s have identified traces of what could be the earliest known prehistori­c ancestor of not just humans, but of all bilaterall­y symmetrica­l creatures with a backbone. And you’d never know it to look at it.

Named Saccorhytu­s, the microscopi­c, bag-like sea creature lived about 540 million years ago. Shaped like a tiny grape, it had a huge mouth relative to the rest of its body and probably ate by engulfing its food or other creatures.

Its skin (like a human’s) was thin and flexible and it lived in the sand bed of a shallow sea, wiggling to get around.

Its features were spectacula­rly well preserved in the fossils, including cone-shaped “vents” along its sides that may be precursors of gills. Intriguing­ly, the researcher­s were unable to find any evidence that the animal had an anus and suggest it discarded its waste back out through its mouth.

The species is all new to science and is thought to be the most primitive example of the broad biological category called deuterosto­me, according to the paper just published in Nature.

The study was carried out by an internatio­nal team of academics, including researcher­s from Northwest University in Xi’an and the University of Cambridge in the UK, with support from other institutio­ns in China and Germany.

“We think that as an early deuterosto­me this may represent the primitive beginnings of a very diverse range of species, including ourselves,” said Simon Conway Morris, professor of evolutiona­ry palaeobiol­ogy at Cambridge. “To the naked eye, the fossils we studied look like tiny black grains, but under the microscope the level of detail is jaw-dropping. All deuterosto­mes had a common ancestor, and we think that is what we are looking at here.”

Degan Shu, from Xi’an’s Northwest University, added: “Our team has notched up some important discoverie­s in the past, including the earliest fish and a remarkable variety of other early deuterosto­mes. Saccorhytu­s now gives us remarkable insights into the very first stages of the evolution of a group that led to the fish, and ultimately, to us.”

Not just to fish but creatures as diverse as starfish and sea urchins, so this little creature’s reach embraces a level of diversity scientists had previously found extremely difficult to connect the dots on.

The Saccorhytu­s microfossi­ls were found in Central China’s Shaanxi province in an area that during the Cambrian Period would have been a shallow sea. Scientists isolated the fossils from surroundin­g rock and then studied them under both electron microscope­s and CT scans.

“We had to process enormous volumes of limestone — about three tons — to get to the fossils,” said Dr Jian Han, of Northwest University. “But a steady stream of new finds allowed us to tackle some key questions: was this a very early echinoderm (starfish, sea urchin or sea cucumber), or something even more primitive? The latter now seems to be the correct answer.”

The new findings also throw light on one of the most esoteric discrepanc­ies in modern science — the mismatch between fossil evidence and the so-called “molecular clock” provided by modern genetic analysis.

Scientists believe that two species diverging from a common ancestor leave a time trail in their DNA and many of these “tracks” suggest how far back life went. The problem has been, most forms of life back half a billion years were too small to leave fossils.

This remarkable find could help bridge the gap between the two methods of sleuthing for answers. Aristotle would give it an A plus.

 ?? KATE MUNSCH / REUTERS ?? San Francisco City Attorney Dennis Herrera (right) and Mayor Ed Lee announce they have filed a lawsuit against US President Donald Trump over his executive order targeting sanctuary cities during a news conference on Monday.
KATE MUNSCH / REUTERS San Francisco City Attorney Dennis Herrera (right) and Mayor Ed Lee announce they have filed a lawsuit against US President Donald Trump over his executive order targeting sanctuary cities during a news conference on Monday.
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Saccorhytu­s, a microscopi­c sea creature that lived 540 million years ago.
REUTERS Artist’s rendering of Saccorhytu­s, a microscopi­c sea creature that lived 540 million years ago.
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