Scientists
recently discovered a rare and important hagfish fossil that includes traces of
preserved slime dating to 100 million years ago.
Eyeless,
jawless hagfish — still around today — are bizarre, eel-like, carrion-eating
fishes that lick the flesh off dead animals using their spiky tongue-like
structures. But their most well-known feature is the sticky slime that they
expel for protection.
And now,
scientists know that hagfish slime is robust enough to leave traces in the
fossil record, finding remarkable evidence in a fossilized hagfish skeleton
excavated in Lebanon. This new discovery is also prompting researchers to
redefine the hagfish's relationship to other ancient fish and to all animals
with backbones. [Photos: The Freakiest
Looking Fish]
Hagfish
fossils are scarce, and this specimen — an "unequivocal fossil
hagfish" — is exceptionally detailed with lots of soft tissue preserved,
scientists reported in a study published online today (Jan. 21) in the
journal Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).
The
fossil dates to the late Cretaceous period (145.5
million to 65 million years ago), and measures 12 inches (31 centimeters) in
length. Researchers dubbed it Tethymyxine
tapirostrum: Tethymyxine comes from "Tethys" (referencing
the Tethys Sea) and the Latinized Greek word "myxnios," which means
"slimy fish." Tapirostrom translates as "snout of a
tapir," and refers to the fish's elongated nose, the study authors wrote.
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