Date: May 23, 2016
Source: Field Museum
For a long time, scientists
believed that the early marine reptiles that came about after the great
Permian-Triassic mass extinction evolved slowly, but the recent discovery of a
strange new fossil brings that view into question. The newly described Sclerocormus parviceps is a marine
reptile called an ichthyosauriform, and its strange features (short snout,
long, whip-like tail) are really different from many of its relatives,
revealing that marine reptiles evolved and diversified after the extinction
more quickly than previously thought.
Two hundred and fifty million
years ago, life on earth was in a tail-spin--climate change, volcanic
eruptions, and rising sea levels contributed to a mass extinction that makes
the death of the dinosaurs look like child's play. Marine life got hit
hardest--96% of all marine species went extinct. For a long time, scientists
believed that the early marine reptiles that came about after the mass
extinction evolved slowly, but the recent discovery of a strange new fossil
brings that view into question.
In a paper published
in Scientific Reports, paleontologists describe a new marine
reptile, Sclerocormus parviceps,
an ichthyosauriform that's breaking all the rules about what ichthyosaurs are
like.
Ichthyosaurs were a massive group
of marine reptiles that lived around the time of the earliest dinosaurs. Most
of them looked a little bit like today's dolphins--streamlined bodies, long
beak-like snouts, and powerful tail fins. But the new species is something of a
black sheep. It has a short snout (its species name even means "small
skull"), and instead of a tail with triangular flukes (think of a fish's
tail-fins), it had a long, whip-like tail without big fins at the end. And
while many ichthyosaurs had conical teeth for catching prey, Sclerocormus was
toothless and instead seems to have used its short snout to create pressure and
suck up food like a syringe. In short, it's really different from most of its
relatives, and that tells scientists something important about evolution.
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