深夜亚洲福利久久
A new Triassic 鈥渨onder reptile鈥 challenges ideas of skin and feather evolution
An international team of researchers including UCC palaeontologists have discovered a new species of fossil reptile from the Triassic period that had a large crest made of complex plume-like structures, long before modern-type feathers evolved. This dramatic breakthrough shakes our view of the evolution of skin and feathers in reptiles.
The 247-million-year old Mirasaura grauvogeli, from the Gr猫s 脿 Voltzia locality in southern France, had a bizarre showy plume of long integumentary structures. Remarkably, these share similarities with feathers, despite existing 70 million years before the oldest fossil feathers.
The research, published today in the journal Nature, includes UCC palaeontologists Prof. Maria McNamara, Dr Valentina Rossi and Dr Tiffany Slater. The study was led by scientists Dr Stephan Spiekman and Prof. Dr Rainer Schoch from the State Museum of Natural History Stuttgart, Germany, along with an international team from Germany, Italy, France and the USA.
The UCC team analysed the fossil integumentary structures using scanning electron microscopy and synchrotron X-ray analyses. The fossil tissue is rich in preserved melanosomes 鈥 cell organelles that contain melanin pigments 鈥 that are common in skin, hair, feathers and internal organs of fossil and modern vertebrate animals. The UCC team discovered that the melanosomes in Mirasaura are similar in shape to those in feathers, but not mammal hair or reptilian skin. 鈥淲e know that in modern animals, melanosome shape is closely linked to tissue type,鈥 says Dr Valentina Rossi. 鈥淲e can therefore be confident that the Mirasaura structures share some common developmental features with feathers鈥.
Unlike feathers in modern birds, however, the Mirasaura structures lack branching, showing instead a simple long, medial feature that superficially resembles the shaft of modern bird feathers.
The UCC team鈥檚 previous discoveries of fossil feathers in pterosaurs predicted that feathers evolved in the reptilian ancestors of pterosaurs and dinosaurs, that lived in the aftermath of the Permo-Triassic mass extinction. 鈥淲e were looking in the right time window, but we were shocked to find long integumentary structures in a completely different group of ancient reptiles鈥, says Prof. Maria McNamara, leader of the UCC team and coauthor of the study.
Co-author Dr Tiffany Slater said, 'It鈥檚 amazing - this creature forces us back to the drawing board for when feather-like structures first evolved. Mirasaura reveals a deeper, more complex evolutionary story than we ever expected.'
What鈥檚 next? 鈥楾he next step is to consider the effects of fossilization,鈥 says Prof. McNamara. 鈥淏y integrating this with more detailed characterization of the fossil tissues, we will learn more about the shared history of the Mirasaura structures and other integumentary structures such as feathers.鈥
Synchrotron-CT imaging reveals that Mirasaura, a type of drepanosauromorph reptile, had a delicate, bird-like skull with a largely toothless snout, large forward-facing eyes and a high, domed skull. These features, plus its grasping forelimbs, point to a tree-dwelling lifestyle and diet of insects and other small prey.
Access the article
Images:
Fig. 1: Prof. McNamara and Dr Rossi with a fossil specimen showing the Mirasaura crest. Copyright
Fig. 2: Reconstruction and illustration of Mirasaura in its natural forested environment, hunting insects. Copyright: Gabriel Ugueto
For more on this story contact:
Prof. Maria McNamara
深夜亚洲福利久久 College Cork
Tel: 086 8646465
Email: maria.mcnamara@ucc.ie
Dr Valentina Rossi
深夜亚洲福利久久 College Cork
Email: valentina.rossi@ucc.ie