• We have updated the guidelines regarding posting political content: please see the stickied thread on Website Issues.

Fossil Fish

Melf

Gone But Not Forgotten
(ACCOUNT RETIRED)
Joined
Nov 6, 2002
Messages
1,698
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/4498049.stm

Fossils illuminate fish evolution

Fossils of an ancient fish - dating back 450 million years, when the creatures had neither bones nor teeth - have been found in South Africa.
The finds, which are 50 million years older than any other fossil fish in Africa, will help provide a "missing link" in the evolution of early fish.

The first of eight fossil specimens was dug up in 1994, and named "Nelson" after the newly elected president.

The research is being conducted by a UK-South African team of scientists.
"These new fish finds are among the most exciting ever," said Richard Aldridge of the University of Leicester. "People may wonder how we know these fossils are fishes, when we have no bones with which to identify them.

"The answer is that the exceptional preservation displayed in these rocks enables us to recognise the eyes, scales and even the liver of the animals. The impressions in the shale are faint, but they are also clear and diagnostic."

Nelson

Professor Aldridge and his team have been working on the deposits in the Cedarberg Mountains, South Africa, for 15 years.

After finding Nelson, the team had to wait another 11 years before they found, amazingly, seven additional specimens in quick succession.

The animals lived in a time when Africa was in an ice age, and before any animals had colonised the land. According to the team, they lived in a shallow sea fed by melt waters from receding ice-sheets.

Although the researchers are still in the early stages of analysing the fossils, they think the fish might have been swimming scavengers.

"They had no teeth, so they might not have been predators," Professor Aldridge told the BBC News website. "They may have been scavengers - they would have fed on detritus probably.

"But they certainly could swim. The bottom conditions in this sediment were very stagnant, so little could live on the bottom."

Professor Aldridge and his team hope the new fossils will help piece together the puzzle of fish evolution.

"These exciting fossils will help fill in the 'missing link' in the evolutionary history of very early fishes," Professor Aldridge said.

Each new fossil find helps to paint a more complete picture, and indicate when various new adaptations evolved.

Oldest fossil

"The fossil record confirms that the evolution of fish was a step-wise event," explained Professor Aldridge. "The various characters that make up a fish, or a vertebrate, didn't all appear at once - they were added one-by-one through evolutionary time.

"These [new] fossils help fill in this pattern of how early vertebrate evolution began."

Nelson and his counterparts are not the oldest fossil fish ever to be found. The fossil of a fish which lived about 530 million years ago in China was found in the late '90s.

But these 450 million-year-old specimens are particularly interesting, Professor Aldridge believes, because they counter the idea that early fish developed mainly in the north.

"These fossils are important because there is a theory that the origins of fish really took place in the northern continents, and then spread south," he said. "This find [from Southern Africa] dispels that theory."

(c) bbc 05

(where this should go? i dunno)
 
Royal College Of Sturgeons.

A fossil of a sturgeon estimated to be more than 66 million years old is the first to be found in Africa.

The sturgeon, declared a “royal fish” by King Edward II in 1324, was previously thought to have only lived in the cooler waters of the northern hemisphere, excluding Africa.

But now this specimen has been discovered in Morocco by University of Portsmouth palaeontologist Professor David Martill.

“It was a surprising discovery because all sturgeon species have been exclusively found in the northern hemisphere in the past. They’ve been located in North America, Europe, Russian Asia, Chinese Asia, but never in South America, Australia, Africa or India, which are the land masses that made up Gondwana, a supercontinent that existed around 336 million years ago and began breaking up around 150 million years ago.”

Sturgeons have long been valued for their meat and roe, which is eaten as caviar, but, as a result of overfishing along with habitat loss, many species are critically endangered, with several are on the verge of extinction in the wild. ...

https://www.ireland-live.ie/news/uk...t-royal-sturgeon-to-have-lived-in-africa.html
 
A thread started by Melf! Back in those old, folky days! Loved it back then!

Anyway, freshwater fish distribution is quite interesting really. There are plenty of cichlids in Africa, Not many in Madagascar, and only three or four species in the sub continent. That should tell you something about continental drift.

Don't even get me started on cichlid distribution in the Caribbean Sea.
 
Last edited:
Back
Top