Google – AFP, 14 June 2013
SYDNEY — Palaeontologists have made the surprising evolutionary discovery that ancient Australian fish may have had abdominal muscles, previously thought to have only developed in land animals.
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A scientist
shows a fish fossil named Gogonasus, in Melbourne,
on October 19, 2006
(AFP/File, William West)
|
SYDNEY — Palaeontologists have made the surprising evolutionary discovery that ancient Australian fish may have had abdominal muscles, previously thought to have only developed in land animals.
Researchers
mapping the oldest fossilised vertebrate muscles ever seen -- in Gogo fish
thought to be 380 million years old -- worked out the position of the muscles and
the orientation of the muscle fibres.
The fossil
fish, found in the Kimberley region of Western Australia, are enclosed in
limestone nodules and are known for their exceptional preservation.
"The
muscles in the abdomen cavity that we found weren't expected because even in
living fish their main mode of propulsion is of course to flap their tails to
left and right so all the muscles are sitting on the side of the body,"
said Gavin Young from Australian National University's Research School of Earth
Sciences.
"What's
interesting is when we found these muscles and did some comparisons, the only
comparable muscles are in... land animals," he added to AFP.
He said the
question now was whether these muscles had the same function as abdominals seen
in land animals.
In the
study published in Science, the researchers prepared and analysed the muscles
in a small number of specimens from three different species.
"(The
ancient fish) have already revealed soft tissues such as nerve and muscle
cells, the oldest known vertebrate embryos, and even a preserved umbilical
cord," Young said.
The latest
study went further and mapped the musculature of the ancient fish for the first
time, possible after researchers realised that soft tissues had been preserved
in some of the specimens, though it was being destroyed in the earlier process
of acid etching the skeletons.
Curtin
University associate professor Kate Trinajstic, a chief investigator on the
ANU-based research into early vertebrate evolution, said the team had been
"stunned to find that our ancient fossil fishes had abs!"
"Abdominal
muscles were thought to be an invention of animals that first walked onto the
land but this discovery shows that these muscles appeared much earlier in our
evolutionary history," she said.
Abdominal
muscles in humans serve a number of functions, including protecting the
internal organs, providing postural support, and for movement.
The first
Australian expedition to collect Gogo fossil fish in the Kimberley was
conducted in 1970.
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