Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Military Space News .




EARLY EARTH
Living fossils? Actually, sturgeon are evolutionary speedsters
by Staff Writers
Ann Arbor MI (SPX) Jun 07, 2013


File image.

Efforts to restore sturgeon in the Great Lakes region have received a lot of attention in recent years, and many of the news stories note that the prehistoric-looking fish are "living fossils" virtually unchanged for millions of years.

But a new study by University of Michigan researchers and their colleagues reveals that in at least one measure of evolutionary change-changes in body size over time-sturgeon have been one of the fastest-evolving fish on the planet.

"Sturgeon are thought of as a living fossil group that has undergone relatively slow rates of anatomical change over time. But that's simply not true," said Daniel Rabosky, assistant professor in the U-M Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology and a curator of herpetology at the Museum of Zoology.

"Our study shows that sturgeon are evolving very quickly in some ways. They have evolved a huge range of body sizes. There are dwarf sturgeon the size of a bass and several other species that are nearly as big as a Volkswagen."

The sturgeon finding is just one result in a wide-ranging study of the rates of species formation and anatomical change in fish. The work involved assembling one of the largest evolutionary trees ever created for any group of animals. The evolutionary relationships between nearly 8,000 species of fish are delineated in the branches of the tree, allowing the researchers to make inferences about all 30,000 or so species of ray-finned fish.

The study's findings are scheduled for online publication in Nature Communications on June 6. Rabosky and Michael Alfaro of the University of California, Los Angeles, are the lead authors. U-M computational evolutionary biologist Stephen Smith is a co-author.

The main goal of the project was to test a longstanding idea in evolutionary biology that has anecdotal support but which had never been rigorously evaluated, Rabosky said. It was Charles Darwin who coined the term "living fossil" to describe extant creatures, such as the gar (another Great Lakes resident) and the lungfish, which have been present for many millions of years in the fossil record yet appear to have undergone very little anatomical change.

Paleontologists have long suspected that these observations reflect a fundamental coupling between the rates of species formation and anatomical change: groups of organisms that contain lots of species also seem to have greater amounts of anatomical variation, while groups with only a few species, such as the gar, lack much morphological variety.

Rabosky and his colleagues assembled a time-calibrated evolutionary tree for 7,864 living fish species using DNA sequence data and body-size information from publicly available databases. Their data set was so large that they had to develop new computer programs from scratch to analyze it.

The new computer models and the vast amount of data enabled the team to study the correlation between how quickly new species form and how rapidly they evolve new body sizes on a scale that had not previously been possible.

They found a strong correlation between the rates of species diversification and body size evolution across the more than 30,000 living species of ray-finned fish, which comprise the majority of vertebrate biological diversity.

"We're basically validating a lot of ideas that have been out there since Darwin, but which had never been tested at this scale due to lack of data and the limits of existing technologies," Rabosky said.

Most of the fish groups fall into one of two categories. Fish like the gar form species very slowly and show little range in body size. Others, like the salmon family-which includes salmon, trout, whitefish and char-do both: they form species quickly and have a wide range of body sizes.

Sturgeon have been around more than 100 million years and today consist of 29 species worldwide, including the lake sturgeon found in the Great Lakes. They don't fit the general pattern found by Rabosky's team; there are few sturgeon species but a great variety in body size.

"In that sense, they're kind of an outlier," Rabosky said.

In addition to Rabosky, Alfaro and Smith, authors of the Nature Communications paper are Francesco Santini of the Universita di Torino in Italy, Jonathan Eastman of the University of Idaho, Brian Sidlauskas of Oregon State University and Jonathan Chang of UCLA.

.


Related Links
University of Michigan
Explore The Early Earth at TerraDaily.com






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








EARLY EARTH
Fish species from 408 million years ago found in Teruel
Madrid, Spain (SPX) Jun 05, 2013
Researchers from the University of Valencia and the Natural History Museum of Berlin have studied the fossilised remains of scales and bones found in Teruel and the south of Zaragoza, ascertaining that they belong to a new fish species called Machaeracanthus goujeti that lived in that area of the peninsula during the Devonian period. The fossils are part of the collection housed in the Palaeonto ... read more


EARLY EARTH
Israel fast-tracks Arrow 3 over Iran nuclear fears

US Missile Shield Threatens Balance in Asia-Pacific Region

US to send Patriot missiles, F-16s to Jordan for drill

Russia developing counter-measures for European anti-missile shield

EARLY EARTH
Putin holds back on Syria missile delivery

Taiwan deploys new powerful rocket system: report

Lockheed Martin Completes Anti Ship Missile Tests

Raytheon, US Navy complete first phase of RAM Block 2 developmental testing

EARLY EARTH
Pakistan families of victims demand halt to US drone strikes

End drone strikes, new Pakistan PM tells US

Incoming Pakistan PM Sharif condemns drone attack

SES Enables Remotely Piloted Aircraft System In Non-Segregated Airspace

EARLY EARTH
Mutualink Platform to be Deployed by US DoD during JUICE 2013

General Dynamics to Deliver U.S. Army's Newest Tactical Ground Station Intelligence System

Boeing-built WGS-5 Satellite Enhances Tactical Communications for Warfighters

US Navy And Lockheed Martin Deliver Secure Communications Satellite For Mobile Users

EARLY EARTH
Chile to buy surplus U.S. armored amphibious vehicles

Raytheon books Paveway II contract

New Nerve and Muscle Interfaces Aid Wounded Warrior Amputees

More than 60 countries sign new arms trade treaty

EARLY EARTH
India promises to clean up military corruption

Thales delivers final Hawkei test vehicles

Netherlands, Germany move to enhance military cooperation

Helicopter, encryptian device deals for EADS companis

EARLY EARTH
Outside View: Trapped in the cul de sac of no good choices

Rising China propels Xi into Obama summit: analysts

Obama, Xi stir intrigue with desert oasis summit

US inventor allowed out by China ahead of summit

EARLY EARTH
Stretchable, transparent graphene-metal nanowire electrode

Shape-shifting nanoparticles flip from sphere to net in response to tumor signal

Gold nanocrystal vibration captured on billion-frames-per-second film

Understanding freezing behavior of water at the nanoscale




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement