keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38426760/the-end-of-evolution
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Richard Brockman
Charles Darwin's theory of evolution was founded on the core belief that natural history is one of slow, incremental change, a concept he called "speciation." A hundred years later Eldredge and Gould challenged Darwin's theory, arguing that the data of paleontology reveals something quite different: long periods of stasis followed by bursts of change, a concept they called "punctuated equilibria." This article will follow that progression and then describe the three punctuated equilibria that I believe led to Homo sapiens ...
March 2024: Psychodynamic Psychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38412135/a-billion-years-of-evolution-manifest-in-nanosecond-protein-dynamics
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Philipp J Heckmeier, Jeannette Ruf, Charlotte Rochereau, Peter Hamm
Protein dynamics form a critical bridge between protein structure and function, yet the impact of evolution on ultrafast processes inside proteins remains enigmatic. This study delves deep into nanosecond-scale protein dynamics of a structurally and functionally conserved protein across species separated by almost a billion years, investigating ten homologs in complex with their ligand. By inducing a photo-triggered destabilization of the ligand inside the binding pocket, we resolved distinct kinetic footprints for each homolog via transient infrared spectroscopy...
March 5, 2024: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38385603/enameloid-bound-%C3%AE-15-n-reveals-large-trophic-separation-among-late-cretaceous-sharks-in-the-northern-gulf-of-mexico
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Chelsea M Comans, Sandi M Smart, Emma R Kast, YueHan Lu, Tina Lüdecke, Jennifer N Leichliter, Daniel M Sigman, Takehito Ikejiri, Alfredo Martínez-García
The nitrogen isotopic composition (15 N/14 N ratio, or δ15 N) of enameloid-bound organic matter (δ15 NEB ) in shark teeth was recently developed to investigate the biogeochemistry and trophic structures (i.e., food webs) of the ancient ocean. Using δ15 NEB , we present the first nitrogen isotopic evidence for trophic differences between shark taxa from a single fossil locality. We analyze the teeth of four taxa (Meristodonoides, Ptychodus, Scapanorhynchus, and Squalicorax) from the Late Cretaceous (83-84 Ma) Trussells Creek site in Alabama, USA, and compare the N isotopic findings with predictions from tooth morphology, the traditional method for inferring shark paleo-diets...
2024: Geobiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38336630/a-juvenile-bird-with-possible-crown-group-affinities-from-a-dinosaur-rich-cretaceous-ecosystem-in-north-america
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Chase Doran Brownstein
BACKGROUND: Living birds comprise the most speciose and anatomically diverse clade of flying vertebrates, but their poor early fossil record and the lack of resolution around the relationships of the major clades have greatly obscured extant avian origins. RESULTS: Here, I describe a Late Cretaceous bird from North America based on a fragmentary skeleton that includes cranial material and portions of the forelimb, hindlimb, and foot and is identified as a juvenile based on bone surface texture...
February 9, 2024: BMC ecology and evolution
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38289186/cognitive-archaeology-and-the-psychological-assessment-of-extinct-minds
#25
REVIEW
Emiliano Bruner
Evolutionary anthropology relies on both neontological and paleontological information. In the latter case, fields such as paleoneurology, neuroarchaeology, and cognitive archaeology are supplying new perspectives in prehistory and neuroscience. Cognitive archaeology, in particular, investigates the behaviors associated with extinct species or cultures according to specific psychological models. For example, changes in working memory, attention, or visuospatial integration can be postulated when related behavioral changes are described in the archaeological record...
January 2024: Journal of Comparative Neurology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38254363/shape-and-size-variations-of-distal-phalanges-in-cattle
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nicoleta Manuta, Buket Çakar, Ozan Gündemir, Mihaela-Claudia Spataru
Studies on the structure of the distal phalanx help explain the development of laminitis. Additionally, examining the structure of the distal phalanx from a taxonomic perspective also contributes to veterinary anatomy. In this study, we examined shape variation in the medial and lateral distal phalanx of both fore- and hindlimbs using the geometric morphometry method. We investigated whether the shape of the distal phalanx differed between phalanx positions and how much of the shape variation in this bone depends on size...
January 7, 2024: Animals: An Open Access Journal From MDPI
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38223757/a-new-perspective-on-the-taxonomy-and-systematics-of-arvicolinae-gray-1821-and-a-new-time-calibrated-phylogeny-for-the-clade
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Charles B Withnell, Simon G Scarpetta
BACKGROUND: Arvicoline rodents are one of the most speciose and rapidly evolving mammalian lineages. Fossil arvicolines are also among the most common vertebrate fossils found in sites of Pliocene and Pleistocene age in Eurasia and North America. However, there is no taxonomically robust, well-supported, time-calibrated phylogeny for the group. METHODS: Here we present well-supported hypotheses of arvicoline rodent systematics using maximum likelihood and Bayesian inference of DNA sequences of two mitochondrial genes and three nuclear genes representing 146 (82% coverage) species and 100% of currently recognized arvicoline genera...
2024: PeerJ
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38215745/paleozoic-cave-system-preserves-oldest-known-evidence-of-amniote-skin
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ethan D Mooney, Tea Maho, R Paul Philp, Joseph J Bevitt, Robert R Reisz
The richest and most diverse assemblage of early terrestrial tetrapods is preserved within the infilled cave system of Richards Spur, Oklahoma (289-286 Mya1 ). Some of the oldest-known terrestrial amniotes2 , 3 are exquisitely preserved here because of early impregnation and encasement of organic material by oil-seep hydrocarbons within rapidly deposited clay-rich cave sediments under toxic anoxic conditions.4 This phenomenon has also afforded the preservation of exceedingly rare integumentary soft tissues, reported here, providing critical first evidence into the anatomical changes marking the transition from the aquatic and semiaquatic lifestyles of anamniotes to the fully terrestrial lifestyles of early amniotes...
January 5, 2024: Current Biology: CB
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38213629/automated-graptolite-identification-at-high-taxonomic-resolution-using-residual-networks
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Zhi-Bin Niu, Si-Yuan Jia, Hong-He Xu
Graptolites, fossils significant for evolutionary studies and shale gas exploration, are traditionally identified visually by taxonomists due to their intricate morphologies and preservation challenges. Artificial intelligence (AI) holds great promise for transforming such meticulous tasks. In this paper, we demonstrate that graptolites can be identified with taxonomist accuracy using a deep learning model. We construct the most sophisticated and largest professional single organisms image dataset to date, which is composed of >34,000 images of 113 graptolite species annotated at pixel-level resolution to train the model, develop, and evaluate deep learning networks to classify graptolites...
January 19, 2024: IScience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38088505/bone-histology-supports-gregarious-behavior-and-an-early-ontogenetic-stage-to-decuriasuchus-quartacolonia-pseudosuchia-loricata-from-the-middle-late-triassic-of-brazil
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Brodsky Dantas Macedo de Farias, Julia Brenda Desojo, Ignacio Alejandro Cerda, Ana Maria Ribeiro, Jorge Ferigolo, Thiago Carlisbino, Cesar Leandro Schultz, Bianca Martins Mastrantonio, Marina Bento Soares
Decuriasuchus quartacolonia is a middle-sized basal "rauisuchian" (Pseudosuchia, Loricata) from the Triassic beds of Brazil, whose original description was based on 10 specimens of equivalent size found in aggregation. In this contribution, we explore the osteohistology of its appendicular bones and a rib, aiming to infer growth patterns and ontogeny. In all analyzed bones (except in the rib) from three individuals, we found fibrolamellar bone (FLB) throughout the cortices, a pattern shared with other histologically sampled basal loricatans...
December 13, 2023: Anatomical Record: Advances in Integrative Anatomy and Evolutionary Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38033183/trait-based-paleontological-niche-prediction-recovers-extinct-ecological-breadth-of-the-earliest-specialized-ant-predators
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Christine Sosiak, Tyler Janovitz, Vincent Perrichot, John Paul Timonera, Phillip Barden
AbstractPaleoecological estimation is fundamental to the reconstruction of evolutionary and environmental histories. The ant fossil record preserves a range of species in three-dimensional fidelity and chronicles faunal turnover across the Cretaceous and Cenozoic; taxonomically rich and ecologically diverse, ants are an exemplar system to test new methods of paleoecological estimation in evaluating hypotheses. We apply a broad extant ecomorphological dataset to evaluate random forest machine learning classification in predicting the total ecological breadth of extinct and enigmatic hell ants...
December 2023: American Naturalist
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38014690/leaf-traits-linked-to-structure-and-palatability-drive-plant-insect-interactions-within-three-forested-ecosystems
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lauren Azevedo-Schmidt, Ellen D Currano
PREMISE: Plant traits and insect herbivory have been highly studied within the modern record but only to a limited extent within the paleontological. Preservation influences what can be measured within the fossil record but modern methods are also not compatible with paleobotanical methods. To remedy this knowledge gap, a comparable framework was created here using modern and paleobotanical methods allowing for future comparisons within the fossil record. METHODS: Insect feeding damage on selected tree species at Harvard Forest, the Smithsonian Environmental Research Center, and La Selva was quantified using the damage type system prevalent within paleobotanical studies, and compared to leaf traits...
November 28, 2023: American Journal of Botany
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37994544/hindlimb-bones-texture-through-postnatal-ages-of-rhea-americana-aves-palaeognathae
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
M B J Picasso, C Acosta Hospitaleche
The bone texture of Rhea americana was evaluated through the examination of a postnatal ontogenetic series. The hind limb bone surfaces of specimens of one, three and five months old, and adults were compared to characterize each stage according to the morphological features generated by their differential ossification. The results suggest a similar process of tissue maturation concerning neognathous birds, although with some differences. A spongy or striated surface with abundant pores in the femur and longitudinal grooves in the tibiotarsus and tarsometatarsus characterizes chicks...
November 23, 2023: Anatomia, Histologia, Embryologia
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37992018/reinforcing-the-idea-of-an-early-dispersal-of-hippopotamus-amphibius-in-europe-restoration-and-multidisciplinary-study-of-the-skull-from-the-middle-pleistocene-of-cava-montanari-rome-central-italy
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Beniamino Mecozzi, Alessio Iannucci, Marco Mancini, Daniel Tentori, Chiara Cavasinni, Jacopo Conti, Mattia Yuri Messina, Alex Sarra, Raffaele Sardella
A skull of Hippopotamus recovered from the area of Tor di Quinto, within the urban area of Rome (central Italy) is here redescribed. Despite being one of the most complete specimens of hippopotamuses of the European Pleistocene, the Tor di Quinto skull did not attract much research interest, due to long-standing uncertainties on its provenance. This work begun in 2021, when the skull was restored, within a large renovation project on the vertebrate exposed at the Earth Science University Museum of Sapienza University of Rome...
2023: PloS One
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37973214/henri-de-lacaze-duthiers-and-the-ascidian-hypothesis
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Catherine Jessus, Vincent Laudet
In 1830, Cuvier and Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire confronted each other in a famous debate on the unity of the animal kingdom, which permeated the zoology of the 19th century. From that time, a growing number of naturalists attempted to understand the large-scale relationships among animals. And among all the questions, that of the origin of vertebrates was one of the most controversial. Analytical methods based on comparative anatomy, embryology and paleontology were developed to identify convincing homologies that would reveal a logical sequence of events for the evolution of an invertebrate into the first vertebrate...
November 16, 2023: Journal of Experimental Zoology. Part B, Molecular and Developmental Evolution
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37933101/from-beasts-to-bytes-revolutionizing-zoological-research-with-artificial-intelligence
#36
REVIEW
Yu-Juan Zhang, Zeyu Luo, Yawen Sun, Junhao Liu, Zongqing Chen
Since the late 2010s, Artificial Intelligence (AI) including machine learning, boosted through deep learning, has boomed as a vital tool to leverage computer vision, natural language processing and speech recognition in revolutionizing zoological research. This review provides an overview of the primary tasks, core models, datasets, and applications of AI in zoological research, including animal classification, resource conservation, behavior, development, genetics and evolution, breeding and health, disease models, and paleontology...
November 18, 2023: Zoological Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37931097/soft-robotics-informs-how-an-early-echinoderm-moved
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Richard Desatnik, Zach J Patterson, Przemysław Gorzelak, Samuel Zamora, Philip LeDuc, Carmel Majidi
The transition from sessile suspension to active mobile detritus feeding in early echinoderms (c.a. 500 Mya) required sophisticated locomotion strategies. However, understanding locomotion adopted by extinct animals in the absence of trace fossils and modern analogues is extremely challenging. Here, we develop a biomimetic soft robot testbed with accompanying computational simulation to understand fundamental principles of locomotion in one of the most enigmatic mobile groups of early stalked echinoderms-pleurocystitids...
November 14, 2023: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37859727/fitting-and-evaluating-univariate-and-multivariate-models-of-within-lineage-evolution
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kjetil Lysne Voje
The nature of phenotypic evolution within lineages is central to many unresolved questions in paleontology and evolutionary biology. Analyses of evolutionary time-series of ancestor-descendant populations in the fossil record are likely to make important contributions to many of these debates. However, the limited number of models that have been applied to these types of data may restrict our ability to interpret phenotypic evolution in the fossil record. Using uni- and multivariate models of trait evolution that make different assumptions regarding the dynamics of the adaptive landscape, I evaluate contrasting hypotheses to explain evolution of size in the radiolarian Eucyrtidium calvertense and armor in the stickleback Gaserosteus doryssus ...
November 2023: Paleobiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37858341/a-50-million-year-old-three-dimensionally-preserved-bat-skull-supports-an-early-origin-for-modern-echolocation
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Suzanne J Hand, Jacob Maugoust, Robin M D Beck, Maeva J Orliac
Bats are among the most recognizable, numerous, and widespread of all mammals. But much of their fossil record is missing, and bat origins remain poorly understood, as do the relationships of early to modern bats. Here, we describe a new early Eocene bat that helps bridge the gap between archaic stem bats and the hyperdiverse modern bat radiation of more than 1,460 living species. Recovered from ∼50 million-year-old cave sediments in the Quercy Phosphorites of southwestern France, Vielasia sigei's remains include a near-complete, three-dimensionally preserved skull-the oldest uncrushed bat cranium yet found...
October 17, 2023: Current Biology: CB
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37849067/taphonomy-of-harpy-eagle-predation-on-primates-and-other-mammals
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Guilherme S T Garbino, Thiago B F Semedo, Everton B P Miranda
The goal of this study is to provide a taphonomic analysis of bone fragments found in harpy eagle nests in the Brazilian Amazonia, utilizing the largest sample of prey remains collected to date. Harpy eagle kill samples were collected from nine nests, between June 2016 and December 2020 in Mato Grosso, Brazil. We identified the specimens, calculated the number of identified specimens (NISP) and minimum number of individuals (MNI). These metrics were used to estimate bone survivability and fragmentation. A total of 1661 specimens (NISP) were collected, representing a minimum number of 234 individuals (MNI)...
October 17, 2023: American Journal of Primatology
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