Board logo

標題: 澳洲3.75億年前母魚化石連胚胎 活產紀錄回推2億年(中英/圖) [打印本頁]

作者: fossilshk    時間: 2008-6-2 06:20 PM     標題: 澳洲3.75億年前母魚化石連胚胎 活產紀錄回推2億年(中英/圖)

The stunning fossil of a fish giving birth that proves animals had 'sex for fun' 375 million years ago

Sex for pleasure is a lot older than we thought, according to a stunning new fossil find announced by scientists yesterday.A fossil of an ancient, extinct Australian fish which died just before giving birth to a live baby is, according to the scientist who made the discovery, 'the earliest evidence of vertebrates having sex by copulation – not just spawning in water, but sex that was fun'.




These are the fossil remains of the 375-million fish - the oldest vertebrate mother ever discovered

The find, revealed in the journal Nature, is by far the oldest 'viviparous', or live, birth yet found by scientists.


The fish, one of a primitive extinct group called the 'Placoderms', lived in the seas of Devonian Earth and has been dated to 380 million years old.


The fossil, discovered by Professor John Long at Museum Victoria in Melbourne,  shows the bones of the tiny baby  fish,  still attached by its umbilical cord. It is thought the mother fish was about to give birth to maybe three or four babies just before she was killed.


“When I first saw the embryo inside the mother fish my jaw dropped, I was silent, stunned like a mullet. I realised that in my hands was the oldest known vertebrate embryo.”




The embryo can clearly be seen in this image of the fossil - even, amazingly, the umbilical cord

The find was made in the Gogo  rock formation east of the remote town of Fitzroy Crossing, Western Australia,   and pushes back the record for a live birth by  200 million years.

The fish, a new species, has been named Materpiscis attenboroughi, 'Attenborough's mother-fish'   in  honour of Sir David, who featured the extraordinary fossil beds at Gogo in his  1979 TV series Life on Earth.

“The discovery is certainly one of the most  extraordinary fossil finds ever made. It is not only the first time ever that  a fossil embryo has been found with an umbilical cord, but it is also the  oldest known example of any creature giving birth to live young,” said Dr Long.

“The existence of the embryo and umbilical cord within the specimen  provides scientists with the first ever example of internal fertilisation - i.e  sex - confirming that some placoderms had remarkably advanced reproductive  biology. This discovery changes our understanding of the evolution of  vertebrates,” he added.



Dr John Long points out the umbilical cord on the fossil, the fossilised remains of the oldest mother ever discovered


The fossilised fish has been named in honour of Sir David Attenborough


The  vertebrates consist of the fishes, amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals.  Only birds, among these, are exclusively egg-laying but live births among fishes  were thought to be confined to the sharks and rays.

Like the sharks, this species of Placoderm possessed a pair of bony graspers with which the male grasped the female while fertilising her with his sperm. “It might have been fun, for the male at least,” said  Dr Long.

Placoderms were fearsome looking creatures, with powerful nutcracker  jaws, clad in bony armour plating and thought to be efficient predators. The  fossil is of a specimen about the size of a mackerel but some placoderms grew to a length of  nearly 20ft, and the group as a whole formed the dominant vertebrates of the  Devonian era, a time when other species of fish were starting to crawl out  onto the land and evolving into the first four-legged  animals.

It is thought the placoderms became extinct as a result of climate change at the end of the Devonian; their place in the pecking order was taken by a new group  of fishes to have evolved: the sharks.

The announcement of the finding was made at the grand opening of the  refurbished Royal Institution in London yesterday, at which the Queen and  the Duke of Edinburgh were present at the press conference.
作者: fossilshk    時間: 2008-6-2 06:36 PM     標題: 澳洲3.75億年前母魚化石連胚胎 活產紀錄回推2億年

澳洲科學家二十八日在英國「自然」期刊發表重大古生物學發現:一塊有三億七千五百萬年歷史、還跟後代以臍帶相連的魚媽媽化石。這不僅是首度發現與胚胎相連的母親化石,也將動物活產的證據大幅推前了約兩億年之久。





動物活產歷史 推前兩億年


這塊絕種脊椎動物「盾皮魚」的化石,在澳洲西北部出土,長約二十五公分,被取名為Materpiscis attenboroughi,屬於全新的「屬」和「種」。盾皮魚常被稱為「海上恐龍」,稱霸湖泊與海洋將近七千萬年,生活在四億兩千萬到三億五千萬年前的「古生代」。

牠不僅是屬於盾皮魚當中全新的屬與種,化石還令人驚訝地立體保存一個連結鈣化臍帶的子宮內胚胎,臍帶與胚胎有部分隱藏在一個魚鰭下,因此科學家完全沒注意。

原本已完成化石定年的科學家,偶然發現化石中連臍帶的胚胎後,馬上用高解析度的掃描式電子顯微鏡與電腦斷層攝影掃描,仔細檢視這塊化石,靠著顯微鏡與斷層掃描,他們連臍帶內的大血管也看得一清二楚。

第一個附臍帶胚胎化石







科學家說,化石魚媽媽與牠還沒生下來的小魚兒,可能是因為在水中突然耗盡氧氣死亡,最後沉到海底,被泥沙覆蓋、隨時間硬化。這塊化石不只是第一個附有臍帶的胚胎化石,也是目前所知年代最久遠的活產案例,比過去已知的案例還要推早了兩億年之久。

報告指出,這種魚類生產方式是從尾巴先出來,和現今海洋中的鯊魚及魟魚等部份物種或許有點類似。化石中存在的胚胎和臍帶提供了最早的「體內受精」的例子,亦即「插入式性交」。







墨爾本維多利亞博物館的隆恩說,這絕對是非凡的化石發現,也改變了我們對脊椎動物演化史的了解。最讓隆恩與同僚訝異的是,複雜的生育系統竟然可追溯回這麼久遠的年代,研究共同作者特麗娜斯提克說,「化石顯示這隻盾皮魚產下卵時,活產同時發生,這些機制同時演化,而非相繼發生」。研究也說,化石內的胚胎連結臍帶,也首度提供體內受精的樣本。
29/05/2008
作者: Franco仔    時間: 2008-6-2 06:57 PM

I know.....今早新聞講過和再東方日期(訂報版)裹睇過''
有早英對照...Thank's for you share''
作者: 達爾文    時間: 2008-6-2 08:51 PM

中英對照,真詳細!
作者: 貓毛飛揚    時間: 2008-6-2 08:57 PM

名乎其實的魚水之歡!
化石清理得很精細阿,真厲害!
看復原,是比較原始得軟骨魚類,樣子很可愛~
作者: 達爾文    時間: 2008-6-2 09:13 PM

盾皮魚應不屬於軟骨魚類,是獨立的
作者: 貓毛飛揚    時間: 2008-6-2 09:28 PM

哦哦,對魚類不了解......認真一點看脊椎,也完全不像軟骨魚
作者: 好黃魚呀    時間: 2008-6-3 03:03 AM

大的發現,古魚幾億年前已有胎生
作者: Franco仔    時間: 2008-6-3 11:36 PM

I see....Thank's for達爾文 (香港版)的資料更新''
作者: 寒武紀    時間: 2008-6-4 02:55 AM

可以說是無頜魚與現代魚(軟硬骨魚類)之中間生物
作者: c7    時間: 2008-6-21 03:47 AM

有時如果拿到好東西亦不懂看是什麼
作者: oviraptor    時間: 2008-6-26 05:46 PM

新聞視像  news
作者: Franco仔    時間: 2008-6-26 06:25 PM

好棒~~~
作者: z35874z    時間: 2008-7-22 11:57 AM

真是大發現
作者: 寒武紀    時間: 2008-7-27 04:01 PM



QUOTE:
原帖由 z35874z 於 2008-7-22 11:57 AM 發表
真是大發現
大家要仔細看啊




歡迎光臨 化石講場-Fossils Board (https://fossilshk.com/forum/) Powered by Discuz! 4.1.0