The Star Malaysia

Humans’ first ancestor a bizarre ugly creature

-

WASHINGTON: Don’t take this the wrong way, but your oldest ancestor was not exactly a beauty.

Scientists on Monday said a tiny marine creature from China that wriggled in the seabed mud about 540 million years ago may be the earliest-known animal in the lengthy evolutiona­ry path that eventually led to humans.

It was a weird-looking beastie with a bag-like body and, for its size, a really big mouth.

University of Cambridge paleontolo­gist Simon Conway Morris noted that humans, who appeared a relatively recent 200,000 years ago, have a series of “evolutiona­rily deeper ancestors” than monkeys and apes.

That point is exemplifie­d by the unique-looking creature called Saccorhytu­s, whose name means wrinkled sack.

“And is not beauty in the eye of the beholder?” asked Conway Morris.

Saccorhytu­s, measuring about 1mm, appears to be the most primitive member of the broad animal group called deuterosto­mes.

This group includes vertebrate­s - fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals (including people) – as well as animals called echinoderm­s including starfish and sea urchins and obscure creatures called hemichorda­tes, which include acorn worms.

Saccorhytu­s lived during the Cambrian Period, a time of exceptiona­l evolutiona­ry experiment­ation.

The primitive biological traits possessed by Saccorhytu­s helped pave the way for the various deuterosto­mes, including vertebrate­s.

Fish, the vanguard of the vertebrate­s, appeared roughly 10 to 15 million years after Saccorhytu­s.

“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,” paleontolo­gist Degan Shu of China’s Northwest University said in a statement provided by the University of Cambridge.

Fossils of about 40 Saccorhytu­s individual­s, including a few superbly preserved specimens, were unearthed in Shaanxi province in central China and look like miniscule black grains.

Saccorhytu­s probably lived between individual grains of sediment on the bottom of a shallow sea.

With its large mouth, it probably ate by simply engulfing food particles or smaller creatures whole.

The researcher­s found no evidence that it had an anus, meaning that its waste material may have been expelled out of the mouth. Conway Morris said that process “from our perspectiv­e sounds rather unappealin­g.”

It also boasted small conical structures on its body, which was covered with a thin, flexible skin. These structures may have allowed water it swallowed to escape, possibly the evolutiona­ry forerunner of fish gills.

The research was published in the journal Nature. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Strange grandfathe­r:An artist’s impression of Saccorhytu­s coronarius, based on the original fossil finds. Its real size was likely no more than a millimeter. — Reuters
Strange grandfathe­r:An artist’s impression of Saccorhytu­s coronarius, based on the original fossil finds. Its real size was likely no more than a millimeter. — Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia