The Guardian (USA)

Fossil amphibian hints at earliest evidence of 'slingshot' tongue

- PA Media

Scientists have uncovered the oldest evidence of a “slingshot” tongue, in fossils of 99m-year-old amphibians.

The prehistori­c armoured creatures, known as albanerpet­ontids, were sitand-wait predators who snatched prey with a projectile firing of their “ballistic tongues”.

Although they had lizard-like claws, scales and tails, analysis indicates that albanerpet­ontids were amphibians and not reptiles, the team said.

They believe the findings, published in the journal Science, redefine how the tiny animals fed. Albanerpet­ontids were previously thought of as undergroun­d burrowers.

Edward Stanley, a co-author of the study and the director of the Florida Museum of Natural History’s digital dis

covery and disseminat­ion laboratory, said: “This discovery adds a super-cool piece to the puzzle of this obscure group of weird little animals. Knowing they had this ballistic tongue gives us a whole new understand­ing of this entire lineage.”

Modern- day amphibians are represente­d by three distinct lineage: frogs, salamander­s, and limbless caecilians. Researcher­s have said that until 2m years ago there was a fourth line, the albanerpet­ontids, whose lineage dated back at least 165m years.

However, Susan Evans, another coauthor of the study and a professor of vertebrate morphology and palaeontol­ogy at University College London, said the lineage could be much more ancient, possibly originatin­g more than 250m years ago.

She said: “If the earliest albanerpet­ontids also had ballistic tongues, the feature has been around for longer than the earliest chameleons, which likely date back to 120m years ago.”

Fossils of the tiny creatures were uncovered in Myanmar, trapped in amber, and a specimen found in “mint condition” gave researcher­s an opportunit­y for detailed examinatio­n.

The researcher­s said the fossil represente­d a new species of albanerpet­ontids, named Yaksha perettii, which was about 5cm long without the tail.

Evans said: “We envision this as a stocky little thing scampering in the leaf litter, well hidden, but occasional­ly coming out for a fly, throwing out its tongue and grabbing it.”

Another fossil, a tiny juvenile previously misidentif­ied as a chameleon because of its “bewilderin­g characteri­stics”, also had features that resembled that of an albanerpet­ontid – such as claws, scales, massive eye sockets and a projectile tongue.

Evans said the revelation that albanerpet­ontids had projectile tongues helped explain some of their “weird and wonderful” characteri­stics, such as their unusual jaw and neck joints and large, forward-looking eyes, a common characteri­stic of predators.

The animals might have breathed entirely through their skin, as some salamander­s did, she added.

Despite the findings, researcher­s said that how albanerpet­ontids fitted in the amphibian family tree remained a mystery.

Evans said: “In theory, albanerpet­ontids could give us a clue as to what the ancestors of modern amphibians looked like. Unfortunat­ely, they’re so specialise­d and so weird in their own way that they’re not helping us all that much.”

 ??  ?? Albanerpet­ontids were sit-and-wait predators, probably mostly running around overground, using their projectile tongue to grab insects. Photograph: Stephanie Abramowicz/ Daza et al/Science/PA
Albanerpet­ontids were sit-and-wait predators, probably mostly running around overground, using their projectile tongue to grab insects. Photograph: Stephanie Abramowicz/ Daza et al/Science/PA
 ??  ?? CT scan of an albanerpet­ontid skull. Photograph: Edward Stanley/Florida Museum of Natural History/PA
CT scan of an albanerpet­ontid skull. Photograph: Edward Stanley/Florida Museum of Natural History/PA

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