Date:

Life history of the 360 million-year-old Acanthostega rewrites the tetrapod move on land

An international team of researchers shows that fossils of the 360 million-year-old tetrapod Acanthostega, one of the iconic transitional forms between fishes and land animals, are not grown-ups but all juveniles.

This conclusion, which is based on high-resolution synchrotron X-ray scans of fossil limb bones, sheds new light on the life cycle of Acanthostega and the so-called conquest of land by tetrapods.

- Advertisement -

Early tetrapods of the Devonian period (419-359 million years ago) were the earliest vertebrate animals that ventured onto land. The move from water to land must have affected every aspect of the biology of these animals, but until now there has been no serious attempt to investigate their life histories – how long they lived, whether they had an aquatic juvenile stage, and so on. Well-preserved skeletons are rare and it has simply been assumed that they represent adults.

The single richest locality for Devonian tetrapods is a so-called mass-death deposit of Acanthostega, discovered in 1987 in Greenland by Jennifer Clack, one of the authors of the study, where dozens of skeletons lie packed together like sardines in a tin. It looks like the tetrapods all died together when a small stream within an “inland delta” (like the modern Okavango in Botswana) dried out.

The team from Uppsala University in Sweden, the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility (ESRF) in France and the University of Cambridge in the UK decided to look at the life history of these fossils by investigating the internal structure of their humeri (upper arm bones).

‘Using the tremendous power of synchrotron X-rays, we were able to access microscopic details in these dense specimens as on real histological slices, but without damaging these unique fossils’, says Paul Tafforeau from the ESRF.

- Advertisement -
Top left: body outline of Acanthostega with the humeri represented in red. Bottom left: 3D model of a humerus of Acanthostega, generated from a synchrotron scan, indicating the position of the high-resolution model shown on the right. Right: 3D transverse section model through the outer layer of the bone showing blood vessel cavities (in pink) that provide clues about the metabolism.
Top left: body outline of Acanthostega with the humeri represented in red. Bottom left: 3D model of a humerus of Acanthostega, generated from a synchrotron scan, indicating the position of the high-resolution model shown on the right. Right: 3D transverse section model through the outer layer of the bone showing blood vessel cavities (in pink) that provide clues about the metabolism.

The microscopic structures in the bones of these fossil tetrapods are almost perfectly preserved.

‘Like a growing tree, a limb bone is marked by seasonal rhythms and lays down annual growth rings. These growth rings, which can be seen in both fossil and living tetrapods, are informative about the development and age of the individual’, says Sophie Sanchez, the lead author of the publication, working at Uppsala University and the ESRF.

The powerful X-ray beam of the ESRF revealed that all studied fossils of Acanthostega were immature individuals, even though they were at least six years old and probably older. Their growth had not yet begun to slow down as it does at sexual maturity. In addition, the researchers showed that Acanthostega’s foreleg remained cartilaginous until late during its development. In contrast to bone, cartilage is a non-mineralised tissue, elastic and far too weak to allow the forelegs to sustain the weight of the animal’s body out of the water.

‘This suggests that the Acanthostega mass-death deposit represents a school of aquatic juveniles that included few or no adults’, says Per Ahlberg from Uppsala University.

So where were the adult Acanthostega living? This remains to be discovered.

The tetrapod move onto land was arguably one of the most radical adaptive shifts in vertebrate evolutionary history.

‘Our study provides a first glimpse of the life-history traits of an early tetrapod. We plan to undertake a more complete survey of early-tetrapod life histories which should have a significant impact on theories about tetrapod terrestrialisation depicted in all textbooks’, concludes Sophie Sanchez.

UPPSALLA UNIVERSITY

- Advertisement -

Stay Updated: Follow us on iOS, Android, Google News, Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, Threads, TikTok, LinkedIn, and our newsletter

spot_img
Mark Milligan
Mark Milligan
Mark Milligan is a multi-award-winning journalist and the Managing Editor at HeritageDaily. His background is in archaeology and computer science, having written over 8,000 articles across several online publications. Mark is a member of the Association of British Science Writers (ABSW), the World Federation of Science Journalists, and in 2023 was the recipient of the British Citizen Award for Education, the BCA Medal of Honour, and the UK Prime Minister's Points of Light Award.
spot_img
spot_img

Mobile Application

spot_img

Related Articles

Monument linked to Iberian star mythology discovered in Jódar

Archaeologists from the Research Institute for Iberian Archaeology (IAI) at the University of Jaén (UJA) have discovered a monument connected to the sun and other celestial bodies within Iberian mythology.

Project is restoring Costa Rica’s mysterious stone spheres

A joint team of specialists from Costa Rica and Mexico are restoring three stone spheres at the Finca 6 Museum Site in Palmar de Osa.

Inscription sheds light on First Emperor’s quest for immortality

China’s First Emperor, Qin Shi Huang, was born in 259 BC in Handan, the capital of Zhao. He was originally named Ying Zheng, or Zhao Zheng, with ‘Zheng’ drawn from Zhengyue, the first month of the Chinese lunar calendar.

Artefacts from Battle of Dubienka unearthed near Uchanie

On July 18th, 1792, Polish forces under General Tadeusz Kościuszko clashed with Russian troops in what became one of the defining engagements of the Polish-Russian War.

Submerged port discovery could lead to Cleopatra’s lost tomb

Archaeologists have discovered a submerged ancient port near the ruins of the Taposiris Magna temple complex west of Alexandria, Egypt.

Archaeologists begin landmark study of Dzhetyasar culture settlements

Archaeologists from the Margulan Institute of Archaeology and the German Institute of Archaeology are conducting the first ever large-scale study of Dzhetyasar culture sites in Kazakhstan.

Study reveals arsenical bronze production during Egypt’s Middle Kingdom

A new open-access study published in Archaeometry unveils the first direct evidence of arsenical bronze production on Elephantine Island, Aswan, dating to Egypt’s Middle Kingdom (c. 2000–1650 BCE).

Hittite seals and tablets among new finds at Kayalıpınar

Archaeologists excavating the Hittite settlement of Kayalıpınar in Türkiye’s Sivas’ Yıldızeli district have unearthed a trove of cuneiform tablets and seal impressions.