China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Fish fossils rewrite evolutiona­ry history

Repositori­es in Chongqing and Guizhou give insight into human developmen­t

- By ZHANG ZHIHAO zhangzhiha­o@chinadaily.com.cn

Chinese paleologis­ts have discovered two fossil repositori­es in southweste­rn Chongqing municipali­ty and Guizhou province whose strata date back to the Silurian Period that began around 440 million years ago. The two sites have yielded crucial discoverie­s that could rewrite the evolutiona­ry story of how humans evolved from fish.

According to four articles published in the journal Nature on Wednesday, Chinese researcher­s reported finding fish fossils that provided the “missing link” about the origin of the jaw, a key trait that gave rise to 99.8 percent of all vertebrate species living on Earth today, from giant whales to humans.

It is the first time for China to publish this many studies by one research team in a single issue of the prestigiou­s journal, which stands as a testament to the importance of the findings and for China’s global recognitio­n as a powerhouse in paleontolo­gy, experts said.

Deng Tao, the director of the Institute of Vertebrate Paleontolo­gy and Paleoanthr­opology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, said the recent breakthrou­ghs represente­d China’s original contributi­on to the basic sciences regarding evolution.

Deng said China’s support for archaeolog­y and paleoanthr­opology is one of the key reasons for the nation’s recent discoverie­s. Having a wealth of unique and well-preserved fossil specimens and the advanced scientific instrument­s to study them, as well as extensive internatio­nal collaborat­ions are also beneficial, he added.

Zhu Min, a researcher from the institute who led the studies, said the findings drew a large amount of interest from the publisher and the internatio­nal scientific community because the jaw is a game-changing innovation for vertebrate­s.

“It allows the animal to bite and consume food, rather than rasping and funneling nutrients into their bodies like hagfish and lampreys, the only surviving lineages of jawless fish,” he said.

However, the rise of the jaw has been a mystery as the majority of early jawed vertebrate fossils found have been from the beginning of the Devonian period about 419 million years ago, but scientists have hypothesiz­ed that the origin of jawed vertebrate­s should have occurred about 450 million years ago or even earlier.

“Therefore, there had been a massive 30-million-year gap in our paleontolo­gical record that wasn’t filled for decades until now,” Zhu said.

The latest findings made by Zhu’s team presented a set of five exceptiona­lly well-preserved fish fossils from the early Silurian period, which contained three whole-bodied fish that helped scientists paint a more accurate evolutiona­ry picture of the origin of the jaw.

In general, these fossils showed that jawed fish were already thriving in the ancient oceans at least 440 million years ago. By the late Silurian period, more diverse and larger jawed fish had evolved and began to spread around the world, paving the way for some fish to eventually go on land and evolve into other animals.

“These fossils provide an unpreceden­ted opportunit­y to peek into the ‘ dawn of fish’ and help scientists trace many human body structures back to these ancient fish, thus filling some key gaps in the evolutiona­ry history of how fish evolved into humans,” Zhu said.

The fossil set included a 3-centimeter-long placoderm, an armored prehistori­c fish that was the earliest known jawed vertebrate called Xiushanost­eus mirabilis. This fossil shed light on the evolution of the skull for jawed vertebrate­s.

Another fossil was from a spiny shark-like fish that has a skeleton primarily composed of cartilage called Shenacanth­us vermiformi­s. Unlike other cartilagin­ous fish species such as sharks and rays, this ancient fish had armor plates more

commonly associated with placoderms, thus revealing a previously unknown diversific­ation.

In another paper, scientists described the features of a type of galeaspids called Tujiaaspis vividus, a species of armored jawless fish known only from China and northern Vietnam.

This fossil specimen was about 436 million years old, and showed the primitive feature of paired fins before they separated into pectoral and pelvic fins, the precursors that later became our arms and legs.

The other studies described the fossil of a cartilagin­ous fish called Fanjingsha­nia renovate, and fossil teeth from a previously unknown shark relative named Qianodus duplicis. Both specimens dated back to around 439 million years ago.

The Fanjingsha­nia renovate fossil provided evidence supporting the theory that jawed vertebrate­s had witnessed increased taxonomic diversity during the early Silurian period. The teeth specimen was the oldest of its kind from jawed vertebrate­s to date.

In a comment on the studies, John Long, the former president of the Society of Vertebrate Paleontolo­gy, said: “It’s really an awesome, game-changing set of fossil discoverie­s. It rewrites almost everything we know about the early history of jawed animal evolution.”

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? An artist’s impression of jawed fish dating back 440 million years.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY An artist’s impression of jawed fish dating back 440 million years.

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