AMERICAN MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY
For Immediate Release
American Museum of Natural History Scientist
Presents New
Findings On Primitive Shark
Announcement Contradicts Current View of Shark,
Bony Fish, and Human Evolution
April 9, 1999 --Shedding new light on the evolutionary
origins of the jaw, John Maisey, a curator in the Department of Vertebrate
Paleontology at the American Museum of Natural History, disclosed the first
detailed description of a 400-million-year-old primitive shark relative from
Bolivia named Pucapampella. This new fossil discovery contradicts the belief
that chondrichthyans, or sharks and their relatives, are primitive due to
their jaw characteristics, and points to an advanced specialization in shark
evolution. It also provides a missing link in the understanding of how jawed
vertebrates evolved from the jawless state -- a crucial initial step toward
human evolution.
The development of the jaw is one of the most significant
evolutionary events in early vertebrate history. Little is known about the
jaw's origins, however, due to a poor fossil record of the critical time when
the first jaws evolved, sometime before the Devonian period (412 - 354 million
years ago). Until now, a 370-million-year-old shark called Cladoselache provided
the paradigm of jaw evolution because good fossils of it have been available
to study for more than a century.
Maisey's paper on Pucapampella, presented
today at a conference on early vertebrate evolution hosted by the Natural
History Museum of London, reveals evidence of jaw evolution that pre-dates
Cladesolache by roughly 30 million years. "This is the earliest shark braincase
that we can actually study in any detail," said Maisey. "The way we view the
early evolution of the jaw now has to change."
Pucapampella's phylogenetic
position lies at the base of the chondrichthyan lineage. Through detailed
morphological analysis, Maisey found that Pucapampella's upper jaw was attached
to the braincase in a way that was atypical for a chondrichthyan, and more
like that of an osteichthyan, or bony fish.
In evolutionary terms, bony fish
have been considered to have a more advanced jaw structure than sharks. However,
Pucapampella suggests that the converse it true. The fact that a shark as
primitive as Pucapampella had a bony fish-like jaw attachment suggests that
modern shark jaws are an more advanced characteristic than the jaws of bony
fish. This closer evolutionary relationship between sharks and bony fish,
in turn, influences how science may now view the relationship between jawed
and jawless vertebrates. "This discovery removes one of the problems of deriving
a jawed vertebrate from a jawless one by saying the jaw has a corresponding
structure in a lamprey, which is jawless," explained Maisey.
Fossils of Pucapampella
have only been found in Bolivia and South Africa, which were geographically
closer during the Devonian period than they are today. This part of the Southern
Hemisphere was covered by a cold, shallow ocean that dramatically contrasts
the warm, tropical waters modern sharks prefer.
In addition to expanding our
knowledge of how fish evolved, Maisey's discovery also expands science's understanding
of our own origins. He points out that many characteristics of human anatomy,
such as the jaw, originated in our fishy ancestors, even though we may not
want to admit it. "The psychology of evolution is interesting," he said. "People
don't mind being called a primate or a mammal, but they don't like being called
a fish." With further investigations of fossil fish, vertebrate paleontologists
may find themselves rewriting the early chapters of our evolutionary history.
* * *
For additional information, contact Karen de Seve, Department of Communications, American Museum of Natural History, 212-496-3411, kdeseve@amnh.org.
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