fbpx
Wikipedia

Evolution of tetrapods

The evolution of tetrapods began about 400 million years ago in the Devonian Period with the earliest tetrapods evolved from lobe-finned fishes.[1] Tetrapods (under the apomorphy-based definition used on this page) are categorized as animals in the biological superclass Tetrapoda, which includes all living and extinct amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals. While most species today are terrestrial, little evidence supports the idea that any of the earliest tetrapods could move about on land, as their limbs could not have held their midsections off the ground and the known trackways do not indicate they dragged their bellies around. Presumably, the tracks were made by animals walking along the bottoms of shallow bodies of water.[2] The specific aquatic ancestors of the tetrapods, and the process by which land colonization occurred, remain unclear. They are areas of active research and debate among palaeontologists at present.

In Late Devonian vertebrate speciation, descendants of pelagic lobe-finned fish such as Eusthenopteron exhibited a sequence of adaptations: Panderichthys, suited to muddy shallows; Tiktaalik with limb-like fins that could take it onto land; early tetrapods in weed-filled swamps, such as Acanthostega, which had feet with eight digits, and Ichthyostega, which had limbs. Descendants also included pelagic lobe-finned fish such as coelacanth species.

Most amphibians today remain semiaquatic, living the first stage of their lives as fish-like tadpoles. Several groups of tetrapods, such as the snakes and cetaceans, have lost some or all of their limbs. In addition, many tetrapods have returned to partially aquatic or fully aquatic lives throughout the history of the group (modern examples of fully aquatic tetrapods include cetaceans and sirenians). The first returns to an aquatic lifestyle may have occurred as early as the Carboniferous Period[3] whereas other returns occurred as recently as the Cenozoic, as in cetaceans, pinnipeds,[4] and several modern amphibians.[5]

The change from a body plan for breathing and navigating in water to a body plan enabling the animal to move on land is one of the most profound evolutionary changes known.[6] It is also one of the best understood, largely thanks to a number of significant transitional fossil finds in the late 20th century combined with improved phylogenetic analysis.[1]

Origin

Evolution of fish

The Devonian period is traditionally known as the "Age of Fish", marking the diversification of numerous extinct and modern major fish groups.[7] Among them were the early bony fishes, who diversified and spread in freshwater and brackish environments at the beginning of the period. The early types resembled their cartilaginous ancestors in many features of their anatomy, including a shark-like tailfin, spiral gut, large pectoral fins stiffened in front by skeletal elements and a largely unossified axial skeleton.[8]

They did, however, have certain traits separating them from cartilaginous fishes, traits that would become pivotal in the evolution of terrestrial forms. With the exception of a pair of spiracles, the gills did not open singly to the exterior as they do in sharks; rather, they were encased in a gill chamber stiffened by membrane bones and covered by a bony operculum, with a single opening to the exterior. The cleithrum bone, forming the posterior margin of the gill chamber, also functioned as anchoring for the pectoral fins. The cartilaginous fishes do not have such an anchoring for the pectoral fins. This allowed for a movable joint at the base of the fins in the early bony fishes, and would later function in a weight bearing structure in tetrapods. As part of the overall armour of rhomboid cosmin scales, the skull had a full cover of dermal bone, constituting a skull roof over the otherwise shark-like cartilaginous inner cranium. Importantly, they also had a pair of ventral paired lungs,[9] a feature lacking in sharks and rays.

It was assumed that fishes to a large degree evolved around reefs, but since their origin about 480 million years ago, they lived in near-shore environments like intertidal areas or permanently shallow lagoons and didn't start to proliferate into other biotopes before 60 million years later. A few adapted to deeper water, while solid and heavily built forms stayed where they were or migrated into freshwater.[10][11] The increase of primary productivity on land during the late Devonian changed the freshwater ecosystems. When nutrients from plants were released into lakes and rivers, they were absorbed by microorganisms which in turn was eaten by invertebrates, which served as food for vertebrates. Some fish also became detritivores.[12] Early tetrapods evolved a tolerance to environments which varied in salinity, such as estuaries or deltas.[13]

Lungs before land

The lung/swim bladder originated as an outgrowth of the gut, forming a gas-filled bladder above the digestive system. In its primitive form, the air bladder was open to the alimentary canal, a condition called physostome and still found in many fish.[14] The primary function is not entirely certain. One consideration is buoyancy. The heavy scale armour of the early bony fishes would certainly weigh the animals down. In cartilaginous fishes, lacking a swim bladder, the open sea sharks need to swim constantly to avoid sinking into the depths, the pectoral fins providing lift.[15] Another factor is oxygen consumption. Ambient oxygen was relatively low in the early Devonian, possibly about half of modern values.[16] Per unit volume, there is much more oxygen in air than in water, and vertebrates are active animals with a high energy requirement compared to invertebrates of similar sizes.[17][18] The Devonian saw increasing oxygen levels which opened up new ecological niches by allowing groups able to exploit the additional oxygen to develop into active, large-bodied animals.[16] Particularly in tropical swampland habitats, atmospheric oxygen is much more stable, and may have prompted a reliance of lungs rather than gills for primary oxygen uptake.[19][20] In the end, both buoyancy and breathing may have been important, and some modern physostome fishes do indeed use their bladders for both.

To function in gas exchange, lungs require a blood supply. In cartilaginous fishes and teleosts, the heart lies low in the body and pumps blood forward through the ventral aorta, which splits up in a series of paired aortic arches, each corresponding to a gill arch.[21] The aortic arches then merge above the gills to form a dorsal aorta supplying the body with oxygenated blood. In lungfishes, bowfin and bichirs, the swim bladder is supplied with blood by paired pulmonary arteries branching off from the hindmost (6th) aortic arch.[22] The same basic pattern is found in the lungfish Protopterus and in terrestrial salamanders, and was probably the pattern found in the tetrapods' immediate ancestors as well as the first tetrapods.[23] In most other bony fishes the swim bladder is supplied with blood by the dorsal aorta.[22]

The breath

In order for the lungs to allow gas exchange, the lungs first need to have gas in them. In modern tetrapods, three important breathing mechanisms are conserved from early ancestors, the first being a CO2/H+ detection system. In modern tetrapod breathing, the impulse to take a breath is triggered by a buildup of CO2 in the bloodstream and not a lack of O2.[24] A similar CO2/H+ detection system is found in all Osteichthyes, which implies that the last common ancestor of all Osteichthyes had a need of this sort of detection system.[24][25] The second mechanism for a breath is a surfactant system in the lungs to facilitate gas exchange. This is also found in all Osteichthyes, even those that are almost entirely aquatic.[26][27] The highly conserved nature of this system suggests that even aquatic Osteichthyes have some need for a surfactant system, which may seem strange as there is no gas underwater. The third mechanism for a breath is the actual motion of the breath. This mechanism predates the last common ancestor of Osteichthyes, as it can be observed in Lampetra camtshatica, the sister clade to Osteichthyes. In Lampreys, this mechanism takes the form of a "cough", where the lamprey shakes its body to allow water flow across its gills. When CO2 levels in the lamprey's blood climb too high, a signal is sent to a central pattern generator that causes the lamprey to "cough" and allow CO2 to leave its body.[28][29] This linkage between the CO2 detection system and the central pattern generator is extremely similar to the linkage between these two systems in tetrapods, which implies homology.

External and internal nares

The nostrils in most bony fish differ from those of tetrapods. Normally, bony fish have four nares (nasal openings), one naris behind the other on each side. As the fish swims, water flows into the forward pair, across the olfactory tissue, and out through the posterior openings. This is true not only of ray-finned fish but also of the coelacanth, a fish included in the Sarcopterygii, the group that also includes the tetrapods. In contrast, the tetrapods have only one pair of nares externally but also sport a pair of internal nares, called choanae, allowing them to draw air through the nose. Lungfish are also sarcopterygians with internal nostrils, but these are sufficiently different from tetrapod choanae that they have long been recognized as an independent development.[30]

The evolution of the tetrapods' internal nares was hotly debated in the 20th century. The internal nares could be one set of the external ones (usually presumed to be the posterior pair) that have migrated into the mouth, or the internal pair could be a newly evolved structure. To make way for a migration, however, the two tooth-bearing bones of the upper jaw, the maxilla and the premaxilla, would have to separate to let the nostril through and then rejoin; until recently, there was no evidence for a transitional stage, with the two bones disconnected. Such evidence is now available: a small lobe-finned fish called Kenichthys, found in China and dated at around 395 million years old, represents evolution "caught in mid-act", with the maxilla and premaxilla separated and an aperture—the incipient choana—on the lip in between the two bones.[31] Kenichthys is more closely related to tetrapods than is the coelacanth,[32] which has only external nares; it thus represents an intermediate stage in the evolution of the tetrapod condition. The reason for the evolutionary movement of the posterior nostril from the nose to lip, however, is not well understood.

Into the shallows

 
Devonian fishes, including an early shark Cladoselache, Eusthenopteron and other lobe-finned fishes, and the placoderm Bothriolepis (Joseph Smit, 1905).

The relatives of Kenichthys soon established themselves in the waterways and brackish estuaries and became the most numerous of the bony fishes throughout the Devonian and most of the Carboniferous. The basic anatomy of group is well known thanks to the very detailed work on Eusthenopteron by Erik Jarvik in the second half of the 20th century.[33] The bones of the skull roof were broadly similar to those of early tetrapods and the teeth had an infolding of the enamel similar to that of labyrinthodonts. The paired fins had a build with bones distinctly homologous to the humerus, ulna, and radius in the fore-fins and to the femur, tibia, and fibula in the pelvic fins.[34]

There were a number of families: Rhizodontida, Canowindridae, Elpistostegidae, Megalichthyidae, Osteolepidae and Tristichopteridae.[35] Most were open-water fishes, and some grew to very large sizes; adult specimens are several meters in length.[36] The Rhizodontid Rhizodus is estimated to have grown to 7 meters (23 feet), making it the largest freshwater fish known.[37]

While most of these were open-water fishes, one group, the Elpistostegalians, adapted to life in the shallows. They evolved flat bodies for movement in very shallow water, and the pectoral and pelvic fins took over as the main propulsion organs. Most median fins disappeared, leaving only a protocercal tailfin. Since the shallows were subject to occasional oxygen deficiency, the ability to breathe atmospheric air with the swim bladder became increasingly important.[6] The spiracle became large and prominent, enabling these fishes to draw air.

Skull morphology

The tetrapods have their root in the early Devonian tetrapodomorph fish.[38] Primitive tetrapods developed from an osteolepid tetrapodomorph lobe-finned fish (sarcopterygian-crossopterygian), with a two-lobed brain in a flattened skull. The coelacanth group represents marine sarcopterygians that never acquired these shallow-water adaptations. The sarcopterygians apparently took two different lines of descent and are accordingly separated into two major groups: the Actinistia (including the coelacanths) and the Rhipidistia (which include extinct lines of lobe-finned fishes that evolved into the lungfish and the tetrapodomorphs).

From fins to feet

 
Stalked fins like those of the bichirs can be used for terrestrial movement

The oldest known tetrapodomorph is Kenichthys from China, dated at around 395 million years old. Two of the earliest tetrapodomorphs, dating from 380 Ma, were Gogonasus and Panderichthys.[39] They had choanae and used their fins to move through tidal channels and shallow waters choked with dead branches and rotting plants.[40] Their fins could have been used to attach themselves to plants or similar while they were lying in ambush for prey. The universal tetrapod characteristics of front limbs that bend forward from the elbow and hind limbs that bend backward from the knee can plausibly be traced to early tetrapods living in shallow water. Pelvic bone fossils from Tiktaalik shows, if representative for early tetrapods in general, that hind appendages and pelvic-propelled locomotion originated in water before terrestrial adaptations.[41]

Another indication that feet and other tetrapod traits evolved while the animals were still aquatic is how they were feeding. They did not have the modifications of the skull and jaw that allowed them to swallow prey on land. Prey could be caught in the shallows, at the water's edge or on land, but had to be eaten in water where hydrodynamic forces from the expansion of their buccal cavity would force the food into their esophagus.[42]

It has been suggested that the evolution of the tetrapod limb from fins in lobe-finned fishes is related to expression of the HOXD13 gene or the loss of the proteins actinodin 1 and actinodin 2, which are involved in fish fin development.[43][44] Robot simulations suggest that the necessary nervous circuitry for walking evolved from the nerves governing swimming, utilizing the sideways oscillation of the body with the limbs primarily functioning as anchoring points and providing limited thrust.[45] This type of movement, as well as changes to the pectoral girdle are similar to those seen in the fossil record can be induced in bichirs by raising them out of water.[46]

A 2012 study using 3D reconstructions of Ichthyostega concluded that it was incapable of typical quadrupedal gaits. The limbs could not move alternately as they lacked the necessary rotary motion range. In addition, the hind limbs lacked the necessary pelvic musculature for hindlimb-driven land movement. Their most likely method of terrestrial locomotion is that of synchronous "crutching motions", similar to modern mudskippers.[47] (Viewing several videos of mudskipper "walking" shows that they move by pulling themselves forward with both pectoral fins at the same time (left & right pectoral fins move simultaneously, not alternatively). The fins are brought forward and planted; the shoulders then rotate rearward, advancing the body & dragging the tail as a third point of contact. There are no rear "limbs"/fins, and there is no significant flexure of the spine involved.)

Denizens of the swamp

The first tetrapods probably evolved in coastal and brackish marine environments, and in shallow and swampy freshwater habitats.[48] Formerly, researchers thought the timing was towards the end of the Devonian. In 2010, this belief was challenged by the discovery of the oldest known tetrapod tracks named the Zachelmie trackways, preserved in marine sediments of the southern coast of Laurasia, now Świętokrzyskie (Holy Cross) Mountains of Poland. They were made during the Eifelian stage at the end of the Middle Devonian. The tracks, some of which show digits, date to about 395 million years ago—18 million years earlier than the oldest known tetrapod body fossils.[49] Additionally, the tracks show that the animal was capable of thrusting its arms and legs forward, a type of motion that would have been impossible in tetrapodomorph fish like Tiktaalik. The animal that produced the tracks is estimated to have been up to 2.5 metres (8.2 ft) long with footpads up to 26 centimetres (10 in) wide, although most tracks are only 15 centimetres (5.9 in) wide.[50]

The new finds suggest that the first tetrapods may have lived as opportunists on the tidal flats, feeding on marine animals that were washed up or stranded by the tide.[49] Currently, however, fish are stranded in significant numbers only at certain times of year, as in alewife spawning season; such strandings could not provide a significant supply of food for predators. There is no reason to suppose that Devonian fish were less prudent than those of today.[51] According to Melina Hale of University of Chicago, not all ancient trackways are necessarily made by early tetrapods, but could also be created by relatives of the tetrapods who used their fleshy appendages in a similar substrate-based locomotion.[52][53]

Palaeozoic tetrapods

Devonian tetrapods

Research by Jennifer A. Clack and her colleagues showed that the very earliest tetrapods, animals similar to Acanthostega, were wholly aquatic and quite unsuited to life on land. This is in contrast to the earlier view that fish had first invaded the land — either in search of prey (like modern mudskippers) or to find water when the pond they lived in dried out — and later evolved legs, lungs, etc.

By the late Devonian, land plants had stabilized freshwater habitats, allowing the first wetland ecosystems to develop, with increasingly complex food webs that afforded new opportunities. Freshwater habitats were not the only places to find water filled with organic matter and dense vegetation near the water's edge. Swampy habitats like shallow wetlands, coastal lagoons and large brackish river deltas also existed at this time, and there is much to suggest that this is the kind of environment in which the tetrapods evolved. Early fossil tetrapods have been found in marine sediments, and because fossils of primitive tetrapods in general are found scattered all around the world, they must have spread by following the coastal lines — they could not have lived in freshwater only.

One analysis from the University of Oregon suggests no evidence for the "shrinking waterhole" theory - transitional fossils are not associated with evidence of shrinking puddles or ponds - and indicates that such animals would probably not have survived short treks between depleted waterholes.[54] The new theory suggests instead that proto-lungs and proto-limbs were useful adaptations to negotiate the environment in humid, wooded floodplains.[55]

The Devonian tetrapods went through two major bottlenecks during what is known as the Late Devonian extinction; one at the end of the Frasnian stage, and one twice as large at the end of the following Famennian stage. These events of extinctions led to the disappearance of primitive tetrapods with fish-like features like Ichthyostega and their primary more aquatic relatives.[56] When tetrapods reappear in the fossil record after the Devonian extinctions, the adult forms are all fully adapted to a terrestrial existence, with later species secondarily adapted to an aquatic lifestyle.[57]

Lungs

It is now clear that the common ancestor of the bony fishes (Osteichthyes) had a primitive air-breathing lung—later evolved into a swim bladder in most actinopterygians (ray-finned fishes). This suggests that crossopterygians evolved in warm shallow waters, using their simple lung when the oxygen level in the water became too low.

Fleshy lobe-fins supported on bones rather than ray-stiffened fins seem to have been an ancestral trait of all bony fishes (Osteichthyes). The lobe-finned ancestors of the tetrapods evolved them further, while the ancestors of the ray-finned fishes (Actinopterygii) evolved their fins in a different direction. The most primitive group of actinopterygians, the bichirs, still have fleshy frontal fins.

Fossils of early tetrapods

Nine genera of Devonian tetrapods have been described, several known mainly or entirely from lower jaw material. All but one were from the Laurasian supercontinent, which comprised Europe, North America and Greenland. The only exception is a single Gondwanan genus, Metaxygnathus, which has been found in Australia.

The first Devonian tetrapod identified from Asia was recognized from a fossil jawbone reported in 2002. The Chinese tetrapod Sinostega pani was discovered among fossilized tropical plants and lobe-finned fish in the red sandstone sediments of the Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region of northwest China. This finding substantially extended the geographical range of these animals and has raised new questions about the worldwide distribution and great taxonomic diversity they achieved within a relatively short time.

 
Oldest tetrapod tracks from Zachelmie in relation to key Devonian tetrapodomorph body fossils

These earliest tetrapods were not terrestrial. The earliest confirmed terrestrial forms are known from the early Carboniferous deposits, some 20 million years later. Still, they may have spent very brief periods out of water and would have used their legs to paw their way through the mud.

Why they went to land in the first place is still debated. One reason could be that the small juveniles who had completed their metamorphosis had what it took to make use of what land had to offer. Already adapted to breathe air and move around in shallow waters near land as a protection (just as modern fish and amphibians often spend the first part of their life in the comparative safety of shallow waters like mangrove forests), two very different niches partially overlapped each other, with the young juveniles in the diffuse line between. One of them was overcrowded and dangerous while the other was much safer and much less crowded, offering less competition over resources. The terrestrial niche was also a much more challenging place for primarily aquatic animals, but because of the way evolution and selection pressure work, those juveniles who could take advantage of this would be rewarded. Once they gained a small foothold on land, thanks to their pre-adaptations, favourable variations in their descendants would gradually result in continuing evolution and diversification.

At this time the abundance of invertebrates crawling around on land and near water, in moist soil and wet litter, offered a food supply. Some were even big enough to eat small tetrapods, but the land was free from dangers common in the water.

From water to land

Initially making only tentative forays onto land, tetrapods adapted to terrestrial environments over time and spent longer periods away from the water. It is also possible that the adults started to spend some time on land (as the skeletal modifications in early tetrapods such as Ichthyostega suggests) to bask in the sun close to the water's edge[citation needed], while otherwise being mostly aquatic.

However, recent microanatomical and histological analysis of tetrapod fossil specimens found that early tetrapods like Acanthostega were fully aquatic, suggesting that adaptation to land happened later.[58]

Carboniferous tetrapods

Until the 1990s, there was a 30 million year gap in the fossil record between the late Devonian tetrapods and the reappearance of tetrapod fossils in recognizable mid-Carboniferous amphibian lineages. It was referred to as "Romer's Gap", which now covers the period from about 360 to 345 million years ago (the Devonian-Carboniferous transition and the early Mississippian), after the palaeontologist who recognized it.

During the "gap", tetrapod backbones developed, as did limbs with digits and other adaptations for terrestrial life. Ears, skulls and vertebral columns all underwent changes too. The number of digits on hands and feet became standardized at five, as lineages with more digits died out. Thus, those very few tetrapod fossils found in this "gap" are all the more prized by palaeontologists because they document these significant changes and clarify their history.

The transition from an aquatic, lobe-finned fish to an air-breathing amphibian was a significant and fundamental one in the evolutionary history of the vertebrates. For an organism to live in a gravity-neutral aqueous environment, then colonize one that requires an organism to support its entire weight and possess a mechanism to mitigate dehydration, required significant adaptations or exaptations within the overall body plan, both in form and in function. Eryops, an example of an animal that made such adaptations, refined many of the traits found in its fish ancestors. Sturdy limbs supported and transported its body while out of water. A thicker, stronger backbone prevented its body from sagging under its own weight. Also, through the reshaping of vestigial fish jaw bones, a rudimentary middle ear began developing to connect to the piscine inner ear, allowing Eryops to amplify, and so better sense, airborne sound.

By the Visean (mid early-Carboniferous) stage, the early tetrapods had radiated into at least three or four main branches. Some of these different branches represent the ancestors to all living tetrapods. This means that the common ancestor of all living tetrapods likely lived in the early Carboniferous. Under a narrow cladistic definition of Tetrapoda (also known as crown-Tetrapoda), which only includes descendants of this common ancestor, tetrapods first appeared in the Carboniferous. Recognizable early tetrapods (in the broad sense) are representative of the temnospondyls (e.g. Eryops) lepospondyls (e.g. Diplocaulus), anthracosaurs, which were the relatives and ancestors of the Amniota, and possibly the baphetids, which are thought to be related to temnospondyls and whose status as a main branch is yet unresolved. Depending on which authorities one follows, modern amphibians (frogs, salamanders and caecilians) are most probably derived from either temnospondyls or lepospondyls (or possibly both, although this is now a minority position).

The first amniotes (clade of vertebrates that today includes reptiles, mammals, and birds) are known from the early part of the Late Carboniferous. By the Triassic, this group had already radiated into the earliest mammals, turtles, and crocodiles (lizards and birds appeared in the Jurassic, and snakes in the Cretaceous). This contrasts sharply with the (possibly fourth) Carboniferous group, the baphetids, which have left no extant surviving lineages.

Carboniferous rainforest collapse

Amphibians and reptiles were strongly affected by the Carboniferous rainforest collapse (CRC), an extinction event that occurred ~307 million years ago. The Carboniferous period has long been associated with thick, steamy swamps and humid rainforests.[59] Since plants form the base of almost all of Earth's ecosystems, any changes in plant distribution have always affected animal life to some degree. The sudden collapse of the vital rainforest ecosystem profoundly affected the diversity and abundance of the major tetrapod groups that relied on it.[60] The CRC, which was a part of one of the top two most devastating plant extinctions in Earth's history, was a self-reinforcing and very rapid change of environment wherein the worldwide climate became much drier and cooler overall (although much new work is being done to better understand the fine-grained historical climate changes in the Carboniferous-Permian transition and how they arose[61]).

The ensuing worldwide plant reduction resulting from the difficulties plants encountered in adjusting to the new climate caused a progressive fragmentation and collapse of rainforest ecosystems. This reinforced and so further accelerated the collapse by sharply reducing the amount of animal life which could be supported by the shrinking ecosystems at that time. The outcome of this animal reduction was a crash in global carbon dioxide levels, which impacted the plants even more.[62] The aridity and temperature drop which resulted from this runaway plant reduction and decrease in a primary greenhouse gas caused the Earth to rapidly enter a series of intense Ice Ages.[59]

This impacted amphibians in particular in a number of ways. The enormous drop in sea level due to greater quantities of the world's water being locked into glaciers profoundly affected the distribution and size of the semiaquatic ecosystems which amphibians favored, and the significant cooling of the climate further narrowed the amount of new territory favorable to amphibians. Given that among the hallmarks of amphibians are an obligatory return to a body of water to lay eggs, a delicate skin prone to desiccation (thereby often requiring the amphibian to be relatively close to water throughout its life), and a reputation of being a bellwether species for disrupted ecosystems due to the resulting low resilience to ecological change,[63] amphibians were particularly devastated, with the Labyrinthodonts among the groups faring worst. In contrast, reptiles - whose amniotic eggs have a membrane that enables gas exchange out of water, and which thereby can be laid on land - were better adapted to the new conditions. Reptiles invaded new niches at a faster rate and began diversifying their diets, becoming herbivorous and carnivorous, rather than feeding exclusively on insects and fish.[64] Meanwhile, the severely impacted amphibians simply could not out-compete reptiles in mastering the new ecological niches,[65] and so were obligated to pass the tetrapod evolutionary torch to the increasingly successful and swiftly radiating reptiles.

Permian tetrapods

In the Permian period: early "amphibia" (labyrinthodonts) clades included temnospondyl and anthracosaur; while amniote clades included the Sauropsida and the Synapsida. Sauropsida would eventually evolve into today's reptiles and birds; whereas Synapsida would evolve into today's mammals. During the Permian, however, the distinction was less clear—amniote fauna being typically described as either reptile or as mammal-like reptile. The latter (synapsida) were the most important and successful Permian animals.

The end of the Permian saw a major turnover in fauna during the Permian–Triassic extinction event: probably the most severe mass extinction event of the phanerozoic. There was a protracted loss of species, due to multiple extinction pulses.[66] Many of the once large and diverse groups died out or were greatly reduced.

Mesozoic tetrapods

Life on Earth seemed to recover quickly after the Permian extinctions, though this was mostly in the form of disaster taxa such as the hardy Lystrosaurus. Specialized animals that formed complex ecosystems with high biodiversity, complex food webs, and a variety of niches, took much longer to recover.[66] Current research indicates that this long recovery was due to successive waves of extinction, which inhibited recovery, and to prolonged environmental stress to organisms that continued into the Early Triassic. Recent research indicates that recovery did not begin until the start of the mid-Triassic, 4M to 6M years after the extinction;[67] and some writers estimate that the recovery was not complete until 30M years after the P-Tr extinction, i.e. in the late Triassic.[66]

A small group of reptiles, the diapsids, began to diversify during the Triassic, notably the dinosaurs. By the late Mesozoic, the large labyrinthodont groups that first appeared during the Paleozoic such as temnospondyls and reptile-like amphibians had gone extinct. All current major groups of sauropsids evolved during the Mesozoic, with birds first appearing in the Jurassic as a derived clade of theropod dinosaurs. Many groups of synapsids such as anomodonts and therocephalians that once comprised the dominant terrestrial fauna of the Permian also became extinct during the Mesozoic; during the Triassic, however, one group (Cynodontia) gave rise to the descendant taxon Mammalia, which survived through the Mesozoic to later diversify during the Cenozoic.

Cenozoic tetrapods

The Cenozoic era began with the end of the Mesozoic era and the Cretaceous epoch; and continues to this day. The beginning of the Cenozoic was marked by the Cretaceous-Paleogene extinction event during which all non-avian dinosaurs became extinct. The Cenozoic is sometimes called the "Age of Mammals".

During the Mesozoic, the prototypical mammal was a small nocturnal insectivore something like a tree shrew. Due to their nocturnal habits, most mammals lost their color vision, and greatly improved their sense of olfaction and hearing. All mammals of today are shaped by this origin. Primates and some Australian marsupials later re-evolved color-vision.

During the Paleocene and Eocene, most mammals remained small (under 20 kg). Cooling climate in the Oligocene and Miocene, and the expansion of grasslands favored the evolution of larger mammalian species.

Ratites run, and penguins swim and waddle: but the majority of birds are rather small, and can fly. Some birds use their ability to fly to complete epic globe-crossing migrations, while others such as frigate birds fly over the oceans for months on end.

Bats have also taken flight, and along with cetaceans have developed echolocation or sonar.

Whales, seals, manatees, and sea otters have returned to the ocean and an aquatic lifestyle.

Vast herds of ruminant ungulates populate the grasslands and forests. Carnivores have evolved to keep the herd-animal populations in check.

Extant (living) tetrapods

Following the great faunal turnover at the end of the Mesozoic, only seven groups of tetrapods were left, with one, the Choristodera, becoming extinct 11 Ma due to unknown reasons. The other six persisting today also include many extinct members:

References

  1. ^ a b Shubin, N. (2008). Your Inner Fish: A Journey Into the 3.5-Billion-Year History of the Human Body. New York: Pantheon Books. ISBN 978-0-375-42447-2.
  2. ^ Clack, Jennifer A. (1997). "Devonian tetrapod trackways and trackmakers; a review of the fossils and footprints" (PDF). Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology. 130 (1–4): 227–250. Bibcode:1997PPP...130..227C. doi:10.1016/S0031-0182(96)00142-3.
  3. ^ Laurin, M. (2010). How Vertebrates Left the Water. Berkeley, California, USA.: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-26647-6.
  4. ^ Canoville, Aurore; Laurin, Michel (2010). "Evolution of humeral microanatomy and lifestyle in amniotes, and some comments on paleobiological inferences". Biological Journal of the Linnean Society. 100 (2): 384–406. doi:10.1111/j.1095-8312.2010.01431.x.
  5. ^ Laurin, Michel; Canoville, Aurore; Quilhac, Alexandra (2009). "Use of paleontological and molecular data in supertrees for comparative studies: the example of lissamphibian femoral microanatomy". Journal of Anatomy. 215 (2): 110–123. doi:10.1111/j.1469-7580.2009.01104.x. PMC 2740958. PMID 19508493.
  6. ^ a b Long JA, Gordon MS (2004). "The greatest step in vertebrate history: a paleobiological review of the fish-tetrapod transition". Physiol. Biochem. Zool. 77 (5): 700–19. doi:10.1086/425183. PMID 15547790. S2CID 1260442. from the original on 2016-04-12. Retrieved 2014-03-09. as PDF 2013-10-29 at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ Wells, H. G. (1922). "Chapter IV: The Age of Fishes". . Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-58734-075-8. Archived from the original on 2014-02-01. Retrieved 2014-03-09..
  8. ^ Colbert, Edwin H. (1969). Evolution of the Vertebrates (2nd ed.). John Wiley & Sons. pp. 49–53. ISBN 9780471164661.
  9. ^ Benton 2005, p. 67
  10. ^ "Vertebrate evolution kicked off in lagoons". 25 October 2018. from the original on 2018-11-12. Retrieved 2018-11-12.
  11. ^ Sallan, Lauren; Friedman, Matt; Sansom, Robert S.; Bird, Charlotte M.; Sansom, Ivan J. (26 October 2018). "The nearshore cradle of early vertebrate diversification | Science". Science. 362 (6413): 460–464. doi:10.1126/science.aar3689. PMID 30361374. S2CID 53089922. from the original on 2019-03-08. Retrieved 2018-11-12.
  12. ^ Vecoli, Marco; Clément, Gaël; Meyer-Berthaud, B. (2010). The Terrestrialization Process: Modelling Complex Interactions at the Biosphere-geosphere Interface. ISBN 9781862393097. from the original on 2018-11-12. Retrieved 2018-11-12.
  13. ^ Goedert, Jean; Lécuyer, Christophe; Amiot, Romain; Arnaud-Godet, Florent; Wang, Xu; Cui, Linlin; Cuny, Gilles; Douay, Guillaume; Fourel, François; Panczer, Gérard; Simon, Laurent; Steyer, J. -Sébastien; Zhu, Min (June 2018). "Euryhaline ecology of early tetrapods revealed by stable isotopes - Nature". Nature. 558 (7708): 68–72. doi:10.1038/s41586-018-0159-2. PMID 29849142. S2CID 44085982. from the original on 2019-03-23. Retrieved 2018-11-12.
  14. ^ Steen, Johan B. (1970). "The Swim Bladder as a Hydrostatic Organ". Fish Physiology. Vol. 4. San Diego, California: Academic Press, Inc. pp. 413–443. ISBN 9780080585246. from the original on 2016-03-02. Retrieved 2016-01-27.
  15. ^ Videler, J.J. (1993). Fish Swimming. New York: Chapman & Hall.
  16. ^ a b Dahl TW, Hammarlund EU, Anbar AD, et al. (October 2010). "Devonian rise in atmospheric oxygen correlated to the radiations of terrestrial plants and large predatory fish". Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 107 (42): 17911–5. Bibcode:2010PNAS..10717911D. doi:10.1073/pnas.1011287107. PMC 2964239. PMID 20884852.
  17. ^ Vaquer-Sunyer R, Duarte CM (October 2008). "Thresholds of hypoxia for marine biodiversity". Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 105 (40): 15452–7. Bibcode:2008PNAS..10515452V. doi:10.1073/pnas.0803833105. PMC 2556360. PMID 18824689.
  18. ^ Gray, J.; Wu, R.; Or, Y. (2002). Effects of hypoxia and organic enrichment on the coastal marine environment. Marine Ecology Progress Series. Vol. 238. pp. 249–279. Bibcode:2002MEPS..238..249G. doi:10.3354/meps238249.
  19. ^ Armbruster, Jonathan W. (1998). "Modifications of the Digestive Tract for Holding Air in Loricariid and Scoloplacid Catfishes" (PDF). Copeia. 1998 (3): 663–675. doi:10.2307/1447796. JSTOR 1447796. (PDF) from the original on 2009-03-26. Retrieved 25 June 2009.
  20. ^ Long, J.A. (1990). "Heterochrony and the origin of tetrapods". Lethaia. 23 (2): 157–166. doi:10.1111/j.1502-3931.1990.tb01357.x.
  21. ^ Romer, A.S. (1949). The Vertebrate Body. Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders. (2nd ed. 1955; 3rd ed. 1962; 4th ed. 1970)
  22. ^ a b Kent, G.C.; Miller, L. (1997). Comparative anatomy of the vertebrates (8th ed.). Dubuque: Wm. C. Brown Publishers. ISBN 978-0-697-24378-2.
  23. ^ Hildebran, M.; Goslow, G. (2001). Analysis of Vertebrate Structure (5th ed.). New York: John Wiley. ISBN 978-0-471-29505-1.
  24. ^ a b Fernandes, Marisa Narciso; da Cruz, André Luis; da Costa, Oscar Tadeu Ferreira; Perry, Steven Franklin (September 2012). "Morphometric partitioning of the respiratory surface area and diffusion capacity of the gills and swim bladder in juvenile Amazonian air-breathing fish, Arapaima gigas". Micron (Oxford, England: 1993). 43 (9): 961–970. doi:10.1016/j.micron.2012.03.018. ISSN 1878-4291. PMID 22512942.
  25. ^ Brauner, C. J.; Matey, V.; Wilson, J. M.; Bernier, N. J.; Val, A. L. (2004-04-01). "Transition in organ function during the evolution of air-breathing; insights from Arapaima gigas, an obligate air-breathing teleost from the Amazon". Journal of Experimental Biology. 207 (9): 1433–1438. doi:10.1242/jeb.00887. ISSN 0022-0949. PMID 15037637.
  26. ^ Daniels, Christopher B.; Orgeig, Sandra; Sullivan, Lucy C.; Ling, Nicholas; Bennett, Michael B.; Schürch, Samuel; Val, Adalberto Luis; Brauner, Colin J. (September 2004). "The origin and evolution of the surfactant system in fish: insights into the evolution of lungs and swim bladders". Physiological and Biochemical Zoology. 77 (5): 732–749. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.385.9019. doi:10.1086/422058. ISSN 1522-2152. PMID 15547792. S2CID 9889616.
  27. ^ Orgeig, Sandra; Morrison, Janna L.; Daniels, Christopher B. (2011-08-31). "Prenatal development of the pulmonary surfactant system and the influence of hypoxia". Respiratory Physiology & Neurobiology. 178 (1): 129–145. doi:10.1016/j.resp.2011.05.015. ISSN 1878-1519. PMID 21642020. S2CID 41126494.
  28. ^ Hsia, Connie C. W.; Schmitz, Anke; Lambertz, Markus; Perry, Steven F.; Maina, John N. (April 2013). "Evolution of Air Breathing: Oxygen Homeostasis and the Transitions from Water to Land and Sky". Comprehensive Physiology. 3 (2): 849–915. doi:10.1002/cphy.c120003. ISSN 2040-4603. PMC 3926130. PMID 23720333.
  29. ^ Hoffman, M.; Taylor, B. E.; Harris, M. B. (April 2016). "Evolution of lung breathing from a lungless primitive vertebrate". Respiratory Physiology & Neurobiology. 224: 11–16. doi:10.1016/j.resp.2015.09.016. ISSN 1878-1519. PMC 5138057. PMID 26476056.
  30. ^ Panchen, A. L. (1967). "The nostrils of choanate fishes and early tetrapods". Biol. Rev. 42 (3): 374–419. doi:10.1111/j.1469-185X.1967.tb01478.x. PMID 4864366. S2CID 36443636.
  31. ^ Zhu, Min; Ahlberg, Per E. (2004). "The origin of the internal nostril of tetrapods". Nature. 432 (7013): 94–7. Bibcode:2004Natur.432...94Z. doi:10.1038/nature02843. PMID 15525987. S2CID 4422813.
    • "Swedish-Chinese research team uncovers the history of the nose". Innovations Report (Press release). November 4, 2004.
  32. ^ Coates, Michael I.; Jeffery, Jonathan E.; Ruta, Marcella (2002). (PDF). Evolution and Development. 4 (5): 390–401. doi:10.1046/j.1525-142X.2002.02026.x. PMID 12356269. S2CID 7746239. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-06-10. Retrieved February 18, 2013.
  33. ^ Geological Survey of Canada (2008-02-07). . Archived from the original on 2004-12-11. Retrieved 2009-02-10.
  34. ^ Meunier, François J.; Laurin, Michel (January 2012). "A microanatomical and histological study of the fin long bones of the Devonian sarcopterygian Eusthenopteron foordi". Acta Zoologica. 93 (1): 88–97. doi:10.1111/j.1463-6395.2010.00489.x.
  35. ^ Ahlberg, P. E.; Johanson, Z. (1998). (PDF). Nature. 395 (6704): 792–794. Bibcode:1998Natur.395..792A. doi:10.1038/27421. S2CID 4430783. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-11-24. Retrieved 2014-03-09.
  36. ^ Moy-Thomas, J. A. (1971). Palaeozoic fishes (2d ed., extensively rev. ed.). Philadelphia: Saunders. ISBN 978-0-7216-6573-3.
  37. ^ Andrews, S. M. (January 1985). "Rhizodont crossopterygian fish from the Dinantian of Foulden, Berwickshire, Scotland, with a re-evaluation of this group". Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh: Earth Sciences. 76 (1): 67–95. doi:10.1017/S0263593300010324. S2CID 129928937.
  38. ^ Ruta, Marcello; Jeffery, Jonathan E.; Coates, Michael I. (2003). "A supertree of early tetrapods". Proceedings of the Royal Society B. 270 (1532): 2507–16. doi:10.1098/rspb.2003.2524. PMC 1691537. PMID 14667343.
  39. ^ Monash University. "West Australian Fossil Find Rewrites Land Mammal Evolution 2017-08-21 at the Wayback Machine." ScienceDaily 19 October 2006. Accessed 11 March 2009
  40. ^ . Palaeos website. Archived from the original on 2013-03-29. Retrieved 11 October 2012. Even closer related was Panderichthys, who even had a choana. These fishes used their fins as paddles in shallow-water habitats choked with plants and detritus.
  41. ^ "375 million-year-old Fish Fossil Sheds Light on Evolution From Fins to Limbs". 2014-01-14. from the original on 2014-04-07. Retrieved 2014-05-31.
  42. ^ Ashley-Ross, M. A.; Hsieh, S. T.; Gibb, A. C.; Blob, R. W. (2013). "Vertebrate Land Invasions—Past, Present, and Future: An Introduction to the Symposium". Integrative and Comparative Biology. 53 (2): 192–196. doi:10.1093/icb/ict048. PMID 23660589.
  43. ^ Schneider, Igor; Shubin, Neil H. (December 2012). "Making Limbs from Fins". Developmental Cell. 23 (6): 1121–1122. doi:10.1016/j.devcel.2012.11.011. PMID 23237946.
  44. ^ Zhang, J.; Wagh, P.; Guay, D.; Sanchez-Pulido, L.; Padhi, B. K.; Korzh, V.; Andrade-Navarro, M. A.; Akimenko, M. A. (2010). "Loss of fish actinotrichia proteins and the fin-to-limb transition". Nature. 466 (7303): 234–237. Bibcode:2010Natur.466..234Z. doi:10.1038/nature09137. PMID 20574421. S2CID 205221027.
  45. ^ Ijspeert, A. J.; Crespi, A.; Ryczko, D.; Cabelguen, J.-M. (9 March 2007). "From Swimming to Walking with a Salamander Robot Driven by a Spinal Cord Model". Science. 315 (5817): 1416–1420. Bibcode:2007Sci...315.1416I. doi:10.1126/science.1138353. PMID 17347441. S2CID 3193002. from the original on 16 January 2020. Retrieved 7 December 2019.
  46. ^ Standen, Emily M.; Du, Trina Y.; Larsson, Hans C. E. (27 August 2014). "Developmental plasticity and the origin of tetrapods". Nature. 513 (7516): 54–58. Bibcode:2014Natur.513...54S. doi:10.1038/nature13708. PMID 25162530. S2CID 1846308.
  47. ^ Stephanie E. Pierce; Jennifer A. Clack; John R. Hutchinson (2012). "Three-dimensional limb joint mobility in the early tetrapod Ichthyostega". Nature. 486 (7404): 524–527. Bibcode:2012Natur.486..523P. doi:10.1038/nature11124. PMID 22722854. S2CID 3127857.
  48. ^ Clack 2002, pp. 86–7
  49. ^ a b Grzegorz Niedźwiedzki; Piotr Szrek; Katarzyna Narkiewicz; Marek Narkiewicz; Per E. Ahlberg (2010). "Tetrapod trackways from the early Middle Devonian period of Poland". Nature. 463 (7277): 43–8. Bibcode:2010Natur.463...43N. doi:10.1038/nature08623. PMID 20054388. S2CID 4428903.
  50. ^ Rex Dalton (January 6, 2010). "Discovery pushes back date of first four-legged animal". Nature News. from the original on 2010-01-14. Retrieved January 8, 2010.
  51. ^ Clack 2012, p. 140
  52. ^ "A Small Step for Lungfish, a Big Step for the Evolution of Walking". from the original on 2017-07-03. Retrieved 2018-02-28.
  53. ^ King, H. M.; Shubin, N. H.; Coates, M. I.; Hale, M. E. (2011). "Behavioral evidence for the evolution of walking and bounding before terrestriality in sarcopterygian fishes". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 108 (52): 21146–21151. Bibcode:2011PNAS..10821146K. doi:10.1073/pnas.1118669109. PMC 3248479. PMID 22160688.
  54. ^ Retallack, Gregory (May 2011). "Woodland Hypothesis for Devonian Tetrapod Evolution" (PDF). Journal of Geology. University of Chicago Press. 119 (3): 235–258. Bibcode:2011JG....119..235R. doi:10.1086/659144. S2CID 128827936. (PDF) from the original on 2013-05-17. Retrieved January 1, 2012.
  55. ^ . ScienceNewsline. December 28, 2011. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved January 17, 2013.
  56. ^ George r. Mcghee, Jr (12 November 2013). When the Invasion of Land Failed: The Legacy of the Devonian Extinctions. ISBN 9780231160575. from the original on 2019-12-27. Retrieved 2016-03-01.
  57. ^ "Research project: The Mid-Palaeozoic biotic crisis: Setting the trajectory of Tetrapod evolution". from the original on 2013-12-12. Retrieved 2014-05-31.
  58. ^ Lennie, Kendra I.; Manske, Sarah L.; Mansky, Chris F.; Anderson, Jason S. (2021). "Locomotory behaviour of early tetrapods from Blue Beach, Nova Scotia, revealed by novel microanatomical analysis". Royal Society Open Science. 8 (5): 210281. doi:10.1098/rsos.210281. PMC 8150034. PMID 34084552.
  59. ^ a b Dimichele, William A.; Cecil, C. Blaine; Montañez, Isabel P.; Falcon-Lang, Howard J. (2010). "Cyclic changes in Pennsylvanian paleoclimate and effects on floristic dynamics in tropical Pangaea". International Journal of Coal Geology. 83 (2–3): 329–344. doi:10.1016/j.coal.2010.01.007. S2CID 64358884.
  60. ^ Davies, Neil S.; Gibling, Martin R. (2013). "The sedimentary record of Carboniferous rivers: Continuing influence of land plant evolution on alluvial processes and Palaeozoic ecosystems". Earth-Science Reviews. 120: 40–79. Bibcode:2013ESRv..120...40D. doi:10.1016/j.earscirev.2013.02.004.
  61. ^ Tabor, Neil J.; Poulsen, Christopher J. (2008). "Palaeoclimate across the Late Pennsylvanian–Early Permian tropical palaeolatitudes: A review of climate indicators, their distribution, and relation to palaeophysiographic climate factors". Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology. 268 (3–4): 293–310. Bibcode:2008PPP...268..293T. doi:10.1016/j.palaeo.2008.03.052.
  62. ^ Gibling, M.R.; Davies, N.S.; Falcon-Lang, H.J.; Bashforth, A.R.; Dimichele, W.A.; Rygel, M.C.; Ielpi, A. (2014). "Palaeozoic co-evolution of rivers and vegetation: a synthesis of current knowledge". Proceedings of the Geologists' Association. 125 (5–6): 524–533. doi:10.1016/j.pgeola.2013.12.003.
  63. ^ Purves, William K.; Orians, Gordon H.; Heller, H. Craig (1995). Life, The Science of Biology (4th ed.). Sunderland, MA, USA: Sinauer Associates. pp. 622–625. ISBN 978-0-7167-2629-6.
  64. ^ Sahney, S.; Benton, M.J.; Falcon-Lang, H.J. (2010). "Rainforest collapse triggered Pennsylvanian tetrapod diversification in Euramerica". Geology. 38 (12): 1079–1082. Bibcode:2010Geo....38.1079S. doi:10.1130/G31182.1.
  65. ^ Pearson, Marianne R.; Benson, Roger B.J.; Upchurch, Paul; Fröbisch, Jörg; Kammerer, Christian F. (2013). "Reconstructing the diversity of early terrestrial herbivorous tetrapods". Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology. 372: 42–49. Bibcode:2013PPP...372...42P. doi:10.1016/j.palaeo.2012.11.008.
  66. ^ a b c Sahney, S.; Benton, M.J. (2008). "Recovery from the most profound mass extinction of all time". Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 275 (1636): 759–65. doi:10.1098/rspb.2007.1370. PMC 2596898. PMID 18198148. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2011-02-22.
  67. ^ Lehrmann, D.J.; Ramezan, J.; Bowring, S.A.; et al. (December 2006). "Timing of recovery from the end-Permian extinction: Geochronologic and biostratigraphic constraints from south China". Geology. 34 (12): 1053–6. Bibcode:2006Geo....34.1053L. doi:10.1130/G22827A.1.

External links

  •   Media related to Evolution of tetrapods at Wikimedia Commons

evolution, tetrapods, also, skeletal, changes, vertebrates, transitioning, from, water, land, vertebrate, land, invasion, evolution, tetrapods, began, about, million, years, devonian, period, with, earliest, tetrapods, evolved, from, lobe, finned, fishes, tetr. See also Skeletal changes of vertebrates transitioning from water to land and Vertebrate land invasion The evolution of tetrapods began about 400 million years ago in the Devonian Period with the earliest tetrapods evolved from lobe finned fishes 1 Tetrapods under the apomorphy based definition used on this page are categorized as animals in the biological superclass Tetrapoda which includes all living and extinct amphibians reptiles birds and mammals While most species today are terrestrial little evidence supports the idea that any of the earliest tetrapods could move about on land as their limbs could not have held their midsections off the ground and the known trackways do not indicate they dragged their bellies around Presumably the tracks were made by animals walking along the bottoms of shallow bodies of water 2 The specific aquatic ancestors of the tetrapods and the process by which land colonization occurred remain unclear They are areas of active research and debate among palaeontologists at present In Late Devonian vertebrate speciation descendants of pelagic lobe finned fish such as Eusthenopteron exhibited a sequence of adaptations Panderichthys suited to muddy shallows Tiktaalik with limb like fins that could take it onto land early tetrapods in weed filled swamps such as Acanthostega which had feet with eight digits and Ichthyostega which had limbs Descendants also included pelagic lobe finned fish such as coelacanth species Most amphibians today remain semiaquatic living the first stage of their lives as fish like tadpoles Several groups of tetrapods such as the snakes and cetaceans have lost some or all of their limbs In addition many tetrapods have returned to partially aquatic or fully aquatic lives throughout the history of the group modern examples of fully aquatic tetrapods include cetaceans and sirenians The first returns to an aquatic lifestyle may have occurred as early as the Carboniferous Period 3 whereas other returns occurred as recently as the Cenozoic as in cetaceans pinnipeds 4 and several modern amphibians 5 The change from a body plan for breathing and navigating in water to a body plan enabling the animal to move on land is one of the most profound evolutionary changes known 6 It is also one of the best understood largely thanks to a number of significant transitional fossil finds in the late 20th century combined with improved phylogenetic analysis 1 Contents 1 Origin 1 1 Evolution of fish 1 2 Lungs before land 1 3 The breath 1 4 External and internal nares 1 5 Into the shallows 1 6 Skull morphology 1 7 From fins to feet 1 8 Denizens of the swamp 2 Palaeozoic tetrapods 2 1 Devonian tetrapods 2 1 1 Lungs 2 1 2 Fossils of early tetrapods 2 1 3 From water to land 2 2 Carboniferous tetrapods 2 2 1 Carboniferous rainforest collapse 2 3 Permian tetrapods 3 Mesozoic tetrapods 4 Cenozoic tetrapods 5 Extant living tetrapods 6 References 7 External linksOrigin EditEvolution of fish Edit Further information Evolution of fish The Devonian period is traditionally known as the Age of Fish marking the diversification of numerous extinct and modern major fish groups 7 Among them were the early bony fishes who diversified and spread in freshwater and brackish environments at the beginning of the period The early types resembled their cartilaginous ancestors in many features of their anatomy including a shark like tailfin spiral gut large pectoral fins stiffened in front by skeletal elements and a largely unossified axial skeleton 8 They did however have certain traits separating them from cartilaginous fishes traits that would become pivotal in the evolution of terrestrial forms With the exception of a pair of spiracles the gills did not open singly to the exterior as they do in sharks rather they were encased in a gill chamber stiffened by membrane bones and covered by a bony operculum with a single opening to the exterior The cleithrum bone forming the posterior margin of the gill chamber also functioned as anchoring for the pectoral fins The cartilaginous fishes do not have such an anchoring for the pectoral fins This allowed for a movable joint at the base of the fins in the early bony fishes and would later function in a weight bearing structure in tetrapods As part of the overall armour of rhomboid cosmin scales the skull had a full cover of dermal bone constituting a skull roof over the otherwise shark like cartilaginous inner cranium Importantly they also had a pair of ventral paired lungs 9 a feature lacking in sharks and rays It was assumed that fishes to a large degree evolved around reefs but since their origin about 480 million years ago they lived in near shore environments like intertidal areas or permanently shallow lagoons and didn t start to proliferate into other biotopes before 60 million years later A few adapted to deeper water while solid and heavily built forms stayed where they were or migrated into freshwater 10 11 The increase of primary productivity on land during the late Devonian changed the freshwater ecosystems When nutrients from plants were released into lakes and rivers they were absorbed by microorganisms which in turn was eaten by invertebrates which served as food for vertebrates Some fish also became detritivores 12 Early tetrapods evolved a tolerance to environments which varied in salinity such as estuaries or deltas 13 Lungs before land Edit The lung swim bladder originated as an outgrowth of the gut forming a gas filled bladder above the digestive system In its primitive form the air bladder was open to the alimentary canal a condition called physostome and still found in many fish 14 The primary function is not entirely certain One consideration is buoyancy The heavy scale armour of the early bony fishes would certainly weigh the animals down In cartilaginous fishes lacking a swim bladder the open sea sharks need to swim constantly to avoid sinking into the depths the pectoral fins providing lift 15 Another factor is oxygen consumption Ambient oxygen was relatively low in the early Devonian possibly about half of modern values 16 Per unit volume there is much more oxygen in air than in water and vertebrates are active animals with a high energy requirement compared to invertebrates of similar sizes 17 18 The Devonian saw increasing oxygen levels which opened up new ecological niches by allowing groups able to exploit the additional oxygen to develop into active large bodied animals 16 Particularly in tropical swampland habitats atmospheric oxygen is much more stable and may have prompted a reliance of lungs rather than gills for primary oxygen uptake 19 20 In the end both buoyancy and breathing may have been important and some modern physostome fishes do indeed use their bladders for both To function in gas exchange lungs require a blood supply In cartilaginous fishes and teleosts the heart lies low in the body and pumps blood forward through the ventral aorta which splits up in a series of paired aortic arches each corresponding to a gill arch 21 The aortic arches then merge above the gills to form a dorsal aorta supplying the body with oxygenated blood In lungfishes bowfin and bichirs the swim bladder is supplied with blood by paired pulmonary arteries branching off from the hindmost 6th aortic arch 22 The same basic pattern is found in the lungfish Protopterus and in terrestrial salamanders and was probably the pattern found in the tetrapods immediate ancestors as well as the first tetrapods 23 In most other bony fishes the swim bladder is supplied with blood by the dorsal aorta 22 The breath Edit In order for the lungs to allow gas exchange the lungs first need to have gas in them In modern tetrapods three important breathing mechanisms are conserved from early ancestors the first being a CO2 H detection system In modern tetrapod breathing the impulse to take a breath is triggered by a buildup of CO2 in the bloodstream and not a lack of O2 24 A similar CO2 H detection system is found in all Osteichthyes which implies that the last common ancestor of all Osteichthyes had a need of this sort of detection system 24 25 The second mechanism for a breath is a surfactant system in the lungs to facilitate gas exchange This is also found in all Osteichthyes even those that are almost entirely aquatic 26 27 The highly conserved nature of this system suggests that even aquatic Osteichthyes have some need for a surfactant system which may seem strange as there is no gas underwater The third mechanism for a breath is the actual motion of the breath This mechanism predates the last common ancestor of Osteichthyes as it can be observed in Lampetra camtshatica the sister clade to Osteichthyes In Lampreys this mechanism takes the form of a cough where the lamprey shakes its body to allow water flow across its gills When CO2 levels in the lamprey s blood climb too high a signal is sent to a central pattern generator that causes the lamprey to cough and allow CO2 to leave its body 28 29 This linkage between the CO2 detection system and the central pattern generator is extremely similar to the linkage between these two systems in tetrapods which implies homology External and internal nares Edit The nostrils in most bony fish differ from those of tetrapods Normally bony fish have four nares nasal openings one naris behind the other on each side As the fish swims water flows into the forward pair across the olfactory tissue and out through the posterior openings This is true not only of ray finned fish but also of the coelacanth a fish included in the Sarcopterygii the group that also includes the tetrapods In contrast the tetrapods have only one pair of nares externally but also sport a pair of internal nares called choanae allowing them to draw air through the nose Lungfish are also sarcopterygians with internal nostrils but these are sufficiently different from tetrapod choanae that they have long been recognized as an independent development 30 The evolution of the tetrapods internal nares was hotly debated in the 20th century The internal nares could be one set of the external ones usually presumed to be the posterior pair that have migrated into the mouth or the internal pair could be a newly evolved structure To make way for a migration however the two tooth bearing bones of the upper jaw the maxilla and the premaxilla would have to separate to let the nostril through and then rejoin until recently there was no evidence for a transitional stage with the two bones disconnected Such evidence is now available a small lobe finned fish called Kenichthys found in China and dated at around 395 million years old represents evolution caught in mid act with the maxilla and premaxilla separated and an aperture the incipient choana on the lip in between the two bones 31 Kenichthys is more closely related to tetrapods than is the coelacanth 32 which has only external nares it thus represents an intermediate stage in the evolution of the tetrapod condition The reason for the evolutionary movement of the posterior nostril from the nose to lip however is not well understood Into the shallows Edit Devonian fishes including an early shark Cladoselache Eusthenopteron and other lobe finned fishes and the placoderm Bothriolepis Joseph Smit 1905 The relatives of Kenichthys soon established themselves in the waterways and brackish estuaries and became the most numerous of the bony fishes throughout the Devonian and most of the Carboniferous The basic anatomy of group is well known thanks to the very detailed work on Eusthenopteron by Erik Jarvik in the second half of the 20th century 33 The bones of the skull roof were broadly similar to those of early tetrapods and the teeth had an infolding of the enamel similar to that of labyrinthodonts The paired fins had a build with bones distinctly homologous to the humerus ulna and radius in the fore fins and to the femur tibia and fibula in the pelvic fins 34 There were a number of families Rhizodontida Canowindridae Elpistostegidae Megalichthyidae Osteolepidae and Tristichopteridae 35 Most were open water fishes and some grew to very large sizes adult specimens are several meters in length 36 The Rhizodontid Rhizodus is estimated to have grown to 7 meters 23 feet making it the largest freshwater fish known 37 While most of these were open water fishes one group the Elpistostegalians adapted to life in the shallows They evolved flat bodies for movement in very shallow water and the pectoral and pelvic fins took over as the main propulsion organs Most median fins disappeared leaving only a protocercal tailfin Since the shallows were subject to occasional oxygen deficiency the ability to breathe atmospheric air with the swim bladder became increasingly important 6 The spiracle became large and prominent enabling these fishes to draw air Skull morphology Edit The tetrapods have their root in the early Devonian tetrapodomorph fish 38 Primitive tetrapods developed from an osteolepid tetrapodomorph lobe finned fish sarcopterygian crossopterygian with a two lobed brain in a flattened skull The coelacanth group represents marine sarcopterygians that never acquired these shallow water adaptations The sarcopterygians apparently took two different lines of descent and are accordingly separated into two major groups the Actinistia including the coelacanths and the Rhipidistia which include extinct lines of lobe finned fishes that evolved into the lungfish and the tetrapodomorphs From fins to feet Edit Stalked fins like those of the bichirs can be used for terrestrial movement The oldest known tetrapodomorph is Kenichthys from China dated at around 395 million years old Two of the earliest tetrapodomorphs dating from 380 Ma were Gogonasus and Panderichthys 39 They had choanae and used their fins to move through tidal channels and shallow waters choked with dead branches and rotting plants 40 Their fins could have been used to attach themselves to plants or similar while they were lying in ambush for prey The universal tetrapod characteristics of front limbs that bend forward from the elbow and hind limbs that bend backward from the knee can plausibly be traced to early tetrapods living in shallow water Pelvic bone fossils from Tiktaalik shows if representative for early tetrapods in general that hind appendages and pelvic propelled locomotion originated in water before terrestrial adaptations 41 Another indication that feet and other tetrapod traits evolved while the animals were still aquatic is how they were feeding They did not have the modifications of the skull and jaw that allowed them to swallow prey on land Prey could be caught in the shallows at the water s edge or on land but had to be eaten in water where hydrodynamic forces from the expansion of their buccal cavity would force the food into their esophagus 42 It has been suggested that the evolution of the tetrapod limb from fins in lobe finned fishes is related to expression of the HOXD13 gene or the loss of the proteins actinodin 1 and actinodin 2 which are involved in fish fin development 43 44 Robot simulations suggest that the necessary nervous circuitry for walking evolved from the nerves governing swimming utilizing the sideways oscillation of the body with the limbs primarily functioning as anchoring points and providing limited thrust 45 This type of movement as well as changes to the pectoral girdle are similar to those seen in the fossil record can be induced in bichirs by raising them out of water 46 A 2012 study using 3D reconstructions of Ichthyostega concluded that it was incapable of typical quadrupedal gaits The limbs could not move alternately as they lacked the necessary rotary motion range In addition the hind limbs lacked the necessary pelvic musculature for hindlimb driven land movement Their most likely method of terrestrial locomotion is that of synchronous crutching motions similar to modern mudskippers 47 Viewing several videos of mudskipper walking shows that they move by pulling themselves forward with both pectoral fins at the same time left amp right pectoral fins move simultaneously not alternatively The fins are brought forward and planted the shoulders then rotate rearward advancing the body amp dragging the tail as a third point of contact There are no rear limbs fins and there is no significant flexure of the spine involved Denizens of the swamp Edit The first tetrapods probably evolved in coastal and brackish marine environments and in shallow and swampy freshwater habitats 48 Formerly researchers thought the timing was towards the end of the Devonian In 2010 this belief was challenged by the discovery of the oldest known tetrapod tracks named the Zachelmie trackways preserved in marine sediments of the southern coast of Laurasia now Swietokrzyskie Holy Cross Mountains of Poland They were made during the Eifelian stage at the end of the Middle Devonian The tracks some of which show digits date to about 395 million years ago 18 million years earlier than the oldest known tetrapod body fossils 49 Additionally the tracks show that the animal was capable of thrusting its arms and legs forward a type of motion that would have been impossible in tetrapodomorph fish like Tiktaalik The animal that produced the tracks is estimated to have been up to 2 5 metres 8 2 ft long with footpads up to 26 centimetres 10 in wide although most tracks are only 15 centimetres 5 9 in wide 50 The new finds suggest that the first tetrapods may have lived as opportunists on the tidal flats feeding on marine animals that were washed up or stranded by the tide 49 Currently however fish are stranded in significant numbers only at certain times of year as in alewife spawning season such strandings could not provide a significant supply of food for predators There is no reason to suppose that Devonian fish were less prudent than those of today 51 According to Melina Hale of University of Chicago not all ancient trackways are necessarily made by early tetrapods but could also be created by relatives of the tetrapods who used their fleshy appendages in a similar substrate based locomotion 52 53 Palaeozoic tetrapods EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message Devonian tetrapods Edit Research by Jennifer A Clack and her colleagues showed that the very earliest tetrapods animals similar to Acanthostega were wholly aquatic and quite unsuited to life on land This is in contrast to the earlier view that fish had first invaded the land either in search of prey like modern mudskippers or to find water when the pond they lived in dried out and later evolved legs lungs etc By the late Devonian land plants had stabilized freshwater habitats allowing the first wetland ecosystems to develop with increasingly complex food webs that afforded new opportunities Freshwater habitats were not the only places to find water filled with organic matter and dense vegetation near the water s edge Swampy habitats like shallow wetlands coastal lagoons and large brackish river deltas also existed at this time and there is much to suggest that this is the kind of environment in which the tetrapods evolved Early fossil tetrapods have been found in marine sediments and because fossils of primitive tetrapods in general are found scattered all around the world they must have spread by following the coastal lines they could not have lived in freshwater only One analysis from the University of Oregon suggests no evidence for the shrinking waterhole theory transitional fossils are not associated with evidence of shrinking puddles or ponds and indicates that such animals would probably not have survived short treks between depleted waterholes 54 The new theory suggests instead that proto lungs and proto limbs were useful adaptations to negotiate the environment in humid wooded floodplains 55 The Devonian tetrapods went through two major bottlenecks during what is known as the Late Devonian extinction one at the end of the Frasnian stage and one twice as large at the end of the following Famennian stage These events of extinctions led to the disappearance of primitive tetrapods with fish like features like Ichthyostega and their primary more aquatic relatives 56 When tetrapods reappear in the fossil record after the Devonian extinctions the adult forms are all fully adapted to a terrestrial existence with later species secondarily adapted to an aquatic lifestyle 57 Lungs Edit It is now clear that the common ancestor of the bony fishes Osteichthyes had a primitive air breathing lung later evolved into a swim bladder in most actinopterygians ray finned fishes This suggests that crossopterygians evolved in warm shallow waters using their simple lung when the oxygen level in the water became too low Fleshy lobe fins supported on bones rather than ray stiffened fins seem to have been an ancestral trait of all bony fishes Osteichthyes The lobe finned ancestors of the tetrapods evolved them further while the ancestors of the ray finned fishes Actinopterygii evolved their fins in a different direction The most primitive group of actinopterygians the bichirs still have fleshy frontal fins Fossils of early tetrapods Edit Nine genera of Devonian tetrapods have been described several known mainly or entirely from lower jaw material All but one were from the Laurasian supercontinent which comprised Europe North America and Greenland The only exception is a single Gondwanan genus Metaxygnathus which has been found in Australia The first Devonian tetrapod identified from Asia was recognized from a fossil jawbone reported in 2002 The Chinese tetrapod Sinostega pani was discovered among fossilized tropical plants and lobe finned fish in the red sandstone sediments of the Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region of northwest China This finding substantially extended the geographical range of these animals and has raised new questions about the worldwide distribution and great taxonomic diversity they achieved within a relatively short time Oldest tetrapod tracks from Zachelmie in relation to key Devonian tetrapodomorph body fossils Eusthenopteron Panderichthys Tiktaalik Acanthostega Ichthyostega Hynerpeton Tulerpeton Crassigyrinus Diadectes These earliest tetrapods were not terrestrial The earliest confirmed terrestrial forms are known from the early Carboniferous deposits some 20 million years later Still they may have spent very brief periods out of water and would have used their legs to paw their way through the mud Why they went to land in the first place is still debated One reason could be that the small juveniles who had completed their metamorphosis had what it took to make use of what land had to offer Already adapted to breathe air and move around in shallow waters near land as a protection just as modern fish and amphibians often spend the first part of their life in the comparative safety of shallow waters like mangrove forests two very different niches partially overlapped each other with the young juveniles in the diffuse line between One of them was overcrowded and dangerous while the other was much safer and much less crowded offering less competition over resources The terrestrial niche was also a much more challenging place for primarily aquatic animals but because of the way evolution and selection pressure work those juveniles who could take advantage of this would be rewarded Once they gained a small foothold on land thanks to their pre adaptations favourable variations in their descendants would gradually result in continuing evolution and diversification At this time the abundance of invertebrates crawling around on land and near water in moist soil and wet litter offered a food supply Some were even big enough to eat small tetrapods but the land was free from dangers common in the water From water to land Edit Main article Vertebrate land invasion Initially making only tentative forays onto land tetrapods adapted to terrestrial environments over time and spent longer periods away from the water It is also possible that the adults started to spend some time on land as the skeletal modifications in early tetrapods such as Ichthyostega suggests to bask in the sun close to the water s edge citation needed while otherwise being mostly aquatic However recent microanatomical and histological analysis of tetrapod fossil specimens found that early tetrapods like Acanthostega were fully aquatic suggesting that adaptation to land happened later 58 Carboniferous tetrapods Edit See also Carboniferous tetrapod Until the 1990s there was a 30 million year gap in the fossil record between the late Devonian tetrapods and the reappearance of tetrapod fossils in recognizable mid Carboniferous amphibian lineages It was referred to as Romer s Gap which now covers the period from about 360 to 345 million years ago the Devonian Carboniferous transition and the early Mississippian after the palaeontologist who recognized it During the gap tetrapod backbones developed as did limbs with digits and other adaptations for terrestrial life Ears skulls and vertebral columns all underwent changes too The number of digits on hands and feet became standardized at five as lineages with more digits died out Thus those very few tetrapod fossils found in this gap are all the more prized by palaeontologists because they document these significant changes and clarify their history The transition from an aquatic lobe finned fish to an air breathing amphibian was a significant and fundamental one in the evolutionary history of the vertebrates For an organism to live in a gravity neutral aqueous environment then colonize one that requires an organism to support its entire weight and possess a mechanism to mitigate dehydration required significant adaptations or exaptations within the overall body plan both in form and in function Eryops an example of an animal that made such adaptations refined many of the traits found in its fish ancestors Sturdy limbs supported and transported its body while out of water A thicker stronger backbone prevented its body from sagging under its own weight Also through the reshaping of vestigial fish jaw bones a rudimentary middle ear began developing to connect to the piscine inner ear allowing Eryops to amplify and so better sense airborne sound By the Visean mid early Carboniferous stage the early tetrapods had radiated into at least three or four main branches Some of these different branches represent the ancestors to all living tetrapods This means that the common ancestor of all living tetrapods likely lived in the early Carboniferous Under a narrow cladistic definition of Tetrapoda also known as crown Tetrapoda which only includes descendants of this common ancestor tetrapods first appeared in the Carboniferous Recognizable early tetrapods in the broad sense are representative of the temnospondyls e g Eryops lepospondyls e g Diplocaulus anthracosaurs which were the relatives and ancestors of the Amniota and possibly the baphetids which are thought to be related to temnospondyls and whose status as a main branch is yet unresolved Depending on which authorities one follows modern amphibians frogs salamanders and caecilians are most probably derived from either temnospondyls or lepospondyls or possibly both although this is now a minority position The first amniotes clade of vertebrates that today includes reptiles mammals and birds are known from the early part of the Late Carboniferous By the Triassic this group had already radiated into the earliest mammals turtles and crocodiles lizards and birds appeared in the Jurassic and snakes in the Cretaceous This contrasts sharply with the possibly fourth Carboniferous group the baphetids which have left no extant surviving lineages Carboniferous rainforest collapse Edit Amphibians and reptiles were strongly affected by the Carboniferous rainforest collapse CRC an extinction event that occurred 307 million years ago The Carboniferous period has long been associated with thick steamy swamps and humid rainforests 59 Since plants form the base of almost all of Earth s ecosystems any changes in plant distribution have always affected animal life to some degree The sudden collapse of the vital rainforest ecosystem profoundly affected the diversity and abundance of the major tetrapod groups that relied on it 60 The CRC which was a part of one of the top two most devastating plant extinctions in Earth s history was a self reinforcing and very rapid change of environment wherein the worldwide climate became much drier and cooler overall although much new work is being done to better understand the fine grained historical climate changes in the Carboniferous Permian transition and how they arose 61 The ensuing worldwide plant reduction resulting from the difficulties plants encountered in adjusting to the new climate caused a progressive fragmentation and collapse of rainforest ecosystems This reinforced and so further accelerated the collapse by sharply reducing the amount of animal life which could be supported by the shrinking ecosystems at that time The outcome of this animal reduction was a crash in global carbon dioxide levels which impacted the plants even more 62 The aridity and temperature drop which resulted from this runaway plant reduction and decrease in a primary greenhouse gas caused the Earth to rapidly enter a series of intense Ice Ages 59 This impacted amphibians in particular in a number of ways The enormous drop in sea level due to greater quantities of the world s water being locked into glaciers profoundly affected the distribution and size of the semiaquatic ecosystems which amphibians favored and the significant cooling of the climate further narrowed the amount of new territory favorable to amphibians Given that among the hallmarks of amphibians are an obligatory return to a body of water to lay eggs a delicate skin prone to desiccation thereby often requiring the amphibian to be relatively close to water throughout its life and a reputation of being a bellwether species for disrupted ecosystems due to the resulting low resilience to ecological change 63 amphibians were particularly devastated with the Labyrinthodonts among the groups faring worst In contrast reptiles whose amniotic eggs have a membrane that enables gas exchange out of water and which thereby can be laid on land were better adapted to the new conditions Reptiles invaded new niches at a faster rate and began diversifying their diets becoming herbivorous and carnivorous rather than feeding exclusively on insects and fish 64 Meanwhile the severely impacted amphibians simply could not out compete reptiles in mastering the new ecological niches 65 and so were obligated to pass the tetrapod evolutionary torch to the increasingly successful and swiftly radiating reptiles Permian tetrapods Edit See also Permian tetrapod In the Permian period early amphibia labyrinthodonts clades included temnospondyl and anthracosaur while amniote clades included the Sauropsida and the Synapsida Sauropsida would eventually evolve into today s reptiles and birds whereas Synapsida would evolve into today s mammals During the Permian however the distinction was less clear amniote fauna being typically described as either reptile or as mammal like reptile The latter synapsida were the most important and successful Permian animals The end of the Permian saw a major turnover in fauna during the Permian Triassic extinction event probably the most severe mass extinction event of the phanerozoic There was a protracted loss of species due to multiple extinction pulses 66 Many of the once large and diverse groups died out or were greatly reduced Mesozoic tetrapods EditLife on Earth seemed to recover quickly after the Permian extinctions though this was mostly in the form of disaster taxa such as the hardy Lystrosaurus Specialized animals that formed complex ecosystems with high biodiversity complex food webs and a variety of niches took much longer to recover 66 Current research indicates that this long recovery was due to successive waves of extinction which inhibited recovery and to prolonged environmental stress to organisms that continued into the Early Triassic Recent research indicates that recovery did not begin until the start of the mid Triassic 4M to 6M years after the extinction 67 and some writers estimate that the recovery was not complete until 30M years after the P Tr extinction i e in the late Triassic 66 A small group of reptiles the diapsids began to diversify during the Triassic notably the dinosaurs By the late Mesozoic the large labyrinthodont groups that first appeared during the Paleozoic such as temnospondyls and reptile like amphibians had gone extinct All current major groups of sauropsids evolved during the Mesozoic with birds first appearing in the Jurassic as a derived clade of theropod dinosaurs Many groups of synapsids such as anomodonts and therocephalians that once comprised the dominant terrestrial fauna of the Permian also became extinct during the Mesozoic during the Triassic however one group Cynodontia gave rise to the descendant taxon Mammalia which survived through the Mesozoic to later diversify during the Cenozoic Cenozoic tetrapods EditThe Cenozoic era began with the end of the Mesozoic era and the Cretaceous epoch and continues to this day The beginning of the Cenozoic was marked by the Cretaceous Paleogene extinction event during which all non avian dinosaurs became extinct The Cenozoic is sometimes called the Age of Mammals During the Mesozoic the prototypical mammal was a small nocturnal insectivore something like a tree shrew Due to their nocturnal habits most mammals lost their color vision and greatly improved their sense of olfaction and hearing All mammals of today are shaped by this origin Primates and some Australian marsupials later re evolved color vision During the Paleocene and Eocene most mammals remained small under 20 kg Cooling climate in the Oligocene and Miocene and the expansion of grasslands favored the evolution of larger mammalian species Ratites run and penguins swim and waddle but the majority of birds are rather small and can fly Some birds use their ability to fly to complete epic globe crossing migrations while others such as frigate birds fly over the oceans for months on end Bats have also taken flight and along with cetaceans have developed echolocation or sonar Whales seals manatees and sea otters have returned to the ocean and an aquatic lifestyle Vast herds of ruminant ungulates populate the grasslands and forests Carnivores have evolved to keep the herd animal populations in check Extant living tetrapods EditFollowing the great faunal turnover at the end of the Mesozoic only seven groups of tetrapods were left with one the Choristodera becoming extinct 11 Ma due to unknown reasons The other six persisting today also include many extinct members Lissamphibia frogs and toads salamanders and caecilians Testudines turtle tortoises and terrapins Lepidosauria tuataras lizards amphisbaenians and snakes Crocodilia crocodiles alligators caimans and gharials Neornithes extant birds Mammalia mammalsReferences Edit a b Shubin N 2008 Your Inner Fish A Journey Into the 3 5 Billion Year History of the Human Body New York Pantheon Books ISBN 978 0 375 42447 2 Clack Jennifer A 1997 Devonian tetrapod trackways and trackmakers a review of the fossils and footprints PDF Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology 130 1 4 227 250 Bibcode 1997PPP 130 227C doi 10 1016 S0031 0182 96 00142 3 Laurin M 2010 How Vertebrates Left the Water Berkeley California USA University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 26647 6 Canoville Aurore Laurin Michel 2010 Evolution of humeral microanatomy and lifestyle in amniotes and some comments on paleobiological inferences Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 100 2 384 406 doi 10 1111 j 1095 8312 2010 01431 x Laurin Michel Canoville Aurore Quilhac Alexandra 2009 Use of paleontological and molecular data in supertrees for comparative studies the example of lissamphibian femoral microanatomy Journal of Anatomy 215 2 110 123 doi 10 1111 j 1469 7580 2009 01104 x PMC 2740958 PMID 19508493 a b Long JA Gordon MS 2004 The greatest step in vertebrate history a paleobiological review of the fish tetrapod transition Physiol Biochem Zool 77 5 700 19 doi 10 1086 425183 PMID 15547790 S2CID 1260442 Archived from the original on 2016 04 12 Retrieved 2014 03 09 as PDF Archived 2013 10 29 at the Wayback Machine Wells H G 1922 Chapter IV The Age of Fishes A Short History of the World Macmillan ISBN 978 1 58734 075 8 Archived from the original on 2014 02 01 Retrieved 2014 03 09 Colbert Edwin H 1969 Evolution of the Vertebrates 2nd ed John Wiley amp Sons pp 49 53 ISBN 9780471164661 Benton 2005 p 67harvnb error no target CITEREFBenton2005 help Vertebrate evolution kicked off in lagoons 25 October 2018 Archived from the original on 2018 11 12 Retrieved 2018 11 12 Sallan Lauren Friedman Matt Sansom Robert S Bird Charlotte M Sansom Ivan J 26 October 2018 The nearshore cradle of early vertebrate diversification Science Science 362 6413 460 464 doi 10 1126 science aar3689 PMID 30361374 S2CID 53089922 Archived from the original on 2019 03 08 Retrieved 2018 11 12 Vecoli Marco Clement Gael Meyer Berthaud B 2010 The Terrestrialization Process Modelling Complex Interactions at the Biosphere geosphere Interface ISBN 9781862393097 Archived from the original on 2018 11 12 Retrieved 2018 11 12 Goedert Jean Lecuyer Christophe Amiot Romain Arnaud Godet Florent Wang Xu Cui Linlin Cuny Gilles Douay Guillaume Fourel Francois Panczer Gerard Simon Laurent Steyer J Sebastien Zhu Min June 2018 Euryhaline ecology of early tetrapods revealed by stable isotopes Nature Nature 558 7708 68 72 doi 10 1038 s41586 018 0159 2 PMID 29849142 S2CID 44085982 Archived from the original on 2019 03 23 Retrieved 2018 11 12 Steen Johan B 1970 The Swim Bladder as a Hydrostatic Organ Fish Physiology Vol 4 San Diego California Academic Press Inc pp 413 443 ISBN 9780080585246 Archived from the original on 2016 03 02 Retrieved 2016 01 27 Videler J J 1993 Fish Swimming New York Chapman amp Hall a b Dahl TW Hammarlund EU Anbar AD et al October 2010 Devonian rise in atmospheric oxygen correlated to the radiations of terrestrial plants and large predatory fish Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 107 42 17911 5 Bibcode 2010PNAS 10717911D doi 10 1073 pnas 1011287107 PMC 2964239 PMID 20884852 Vaquer Sunyer R Duarte CM October 2008 Thresholds of hypoxia for marine biodiversity Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 105 40 15452 7 Bibcode 2008PNAS 10515452V doi 10 1073 pnas 0803833105 PMC 2556360 PMID 18824689 Gray J Wu R Or Y 2002 Effects of hypoxia and organic enrichment on the coastal marine environment Marine Ecology Progress Series Vol 238 pp 249 279 Bibcode 2002MEPS 238 249G doi 10 3354 meps238249 Armbruster Jonathan W 1998 Modifications of the Digestive Tract for Holding Air in Loricariid and Scoloplacid Catfishes PDF Copeia 1998 3 663 675 doi 10 2307 1447796 JSTOR 1447796 Archived PDF from the original on 2009 03 26 Retrieved 25 June 2009 Long J A 1990 Heterochrony and the origin of tetrapods Lethaia 23 2 157 166 doi 10 1111 j 1502 3931 1990 tb01357 x Romer A S 1949 The Vertebrate Body Philadelphia W B Saunders 2nd ed 1955 3rd ed 1962 4th ed 1970 a b Kent G C Miller L 1997 Comparative anatomy of the vertebrates 8th ed Dubuque Wm C Brown Publishers ISBN 978 0 697 24378 2 Hildebran M Goslow G 2001 Analysis of Vertebrate Structure 5th ed New York John Wiley ISBN 978 0 471 29505 1 a b Fernandes Marisa Narciso da Cruz Andre Luis da Costa Oscar Tadeu Ferreira Perry Steven Franklin September 2012 Morphometric partitioning of the respiratory surface area and diffusion capacity of the gills and swim bladder in juvenile Amazonian air breathing fish Arapaima gigas Micron Oxford England 1993 43 9 961 970 doi 10 1016 j micron 2012 03 018 ISSN 1878 4291 PMID 22512942 Brauner C J Matey V Wilson J M Bernier N J Val A L 2004 04 01 Transition in organ function during the evolution of air breathing insights from Arapaima gigas an obligate air breathing teleost from the Amazon Journal of Experimental Biology 207 9 1433 1438 doi 10 1242 jeb 00887 ISSN 0022 0949 PMID 15037637 Daniels Christopher B Orgeig Sandra Sullivan Lucy C Ling Nicholas Bennett Michael B Schurch Samuel Val Adalberto Luis Brauner Colin J September 2004 The origin and evolution of the surfactant system in fish insights into the evolution of lungs and swim bladders Physiological and Biochemical Zoology 77 5 732 749 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 385 9019 doi 10 1086 422058 ISSN 1522 2152 PMID 15547792 S2CID 9889616 Orgeig Sandra Morrison Janna L Daniels Christopher B 2011 08 31 Prenatal development of the pulmonary surfactant system and the influence of hypoxia Respiratory Physiology amp Neurobiology 178 1 129 145 doi 10 1016 j resp 2011 05 015 ISSN 1878 1519 PMID 21642020 S2CID 41126494 Hsia Connie C W Schmitz Anke Lambertz Markus Perry Steven F Maina John N April 2013 Evolution of Air Breathing Oxygen Homeostasis and the Transitions from Water to Land and Sky Comprehensive Physiology 3 2 849 915 doi 10 1002 cphy c120003 ISSN 2040 4603 PMC 3926130 PMID 23720333 Hoffman M Taylor B E Harris M B April 2016 Evolution of lung breathing from a lungless primitive vertebrate Respiratory Physiology amp Neurobiology 224 11 16 doi 10 1016 j resp 2015 09 016 ISSN 1878 1519 PMC 5138057 PMID 26476056 Panchen A L 1967 The nostrils of choanate fishes and early tetrapods Biol Rev 42 3 374 419 doi 10 1111 j 1469 185X 1967 tb01478 x PMID 4864366 S2CID 36443636 Zhu Min Ahlberg Per E 2004 The origin of the internal nostril of tetrapods Nature 432 7013 94 7 Bibcode 2004Natur 432 94Z doi 10 1038 nature02843 PMID 15525987 S2CID 4422813 Swedish Chinese research team uncovers the history of the nose Innovations Report Press release November 4 2004 Coates Michael I Jeffery Jonathan E Ruta Marcella 2002 Fins to limbs what the fossils say PDF Evolution and Development 4 5 390 401 doi 10 1046 j 1525 142X 2002 02026 x PMID 12356269 S2CID 7746239 Archived from the original PDF on 2010 06 10 Retrieved February 18 2013 Geological Survey of Canada 2008 02 07 Past lives Chronicles of Canadian Paleontology Eusthenopteron the Prince of Miguasha Archived from the original on 2004 12 11 Retrieved 2009 02 10 Meunier Francois J Laurin Michel January 2012 A microanatomical and histological study of the fin long bones of the Devonian sarcopterygian Eusthenopteron foordi Acta Zoologica 93 1 88 97 doi 10 1111 j 1463 6395 2010 00489 x Ahlberg P E Johanson Z 1998 Osteolepiforms and the ancestry of tetrapods PDF Nature 395 6704 792 794 Bibcode 1998Natur 395 792A doi 10 1038 27421 S2CID 4430783 Archived from the original PDF on 2014 11 24 Retrieved 2014 03 09 Moy Thomas J A 1971 Palaeozoic fishes 2d ed extensively rev ed Philadelphia Saunders ISBN 978 0 7216 6573 3 Andrews S M January 1985 Rhizodont crossopterygian fish from the Dinantian of Foulden Berwickshire Scotland with a re evaluation of this group Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh Earth Sciences 76 1 67 95 doi 10 1017 S0263593300010324 S2CID 129928937 Ruta Marcello Jeffery Jonathan E Coates Michael I 2003 A supertree of early tetrapods Proceedings of the Royal Society B 270 1532 2507 16 doi 10 1098 rspb 2003 2524 PMC 1691537 PMID 14667343 Monash University West Australian Fossil Find Rewrites Land Mammal Evolution Archived 2017 08 21 at the Wayback Machine ScienceDaily 19 October 2006 Accessed 11 March 2009 Tetrapoda Palaeos website Archived from the original on 2013 03 29 Retrieved 11 October 2012 Even closer related was Panderichthys who even had a choana These fishes used their fins as paddles in shallow water habitats choked with plants and detritus 375 million year old Fish Fossil Sheds Light on Evolution From Fins to Limbs 2014 01 14 Archived from the original on 2014 04 07 Retrieved 2014 05 31 Ashley Ross M A Hsieh S T Gibb A C Blob R W 2013 Vertebrate Land Invasions Past Present and Future An Introduction to the Symposium Integrative and Comparative Biology 53 2 192 196 doi 10 1093 icb ict048 PMID 23660589 Schneider Igor Shubin Neil H December 2012 Making Limbs from Fins Developmental Cell 23 6 1121 1122 doi 10 1016 j devcel 2012 11 011 PMID 23237946 Zhang J Wagh P Guay D Sanchez Pulido L Padhi B K Korzh V Andrade Navarro M A Akimenko M A 2010 Loss of fish actinotrichia proteins and the fin to limb transition Nature 466 7303 234 237 Bibcode 2010Natur 466 234Z doi 10 1038 nature09137 PMID 20574421 S2CID 205221027 Ijspeert A J Crespi A Ryczko D Cabelguen J M 9 March 2007 From Swimming to Walking with a Salamander Robot Driven by a Spinal Cord Model Science 315 5817 1416 1420 Bibcode 2007Sci 315 1416I doi 10 1126 science 1138353 PMID 17347441 S2CID 3193002 Archived from the original on 16 January 2020 Retrieved 7 December 2019 Standen Emily M Du Trina Y Larsson Hans C E 27 August 2014 Developmental plasticity and the origin of tetrapods Nature 513 7516 54 58 Bibcode 2014Natur 513 54S doi 10 1038 nature13708 PMID 25162530 S2CID 1846308 Stephanie E Pierce Jennifer A Clack John R Hutchinson 2012 Three dimensional limb joint mobility in the early tetrapod Ichthyostega Nature 486 7404 524 527 Bibcode 2012Natur 486 523P doi 10 1038 nature11124 PMID 22722854 S2CID 3127857 Clack 2002 pp 86 7harvnb error no target CITEREFClack2002 help a b Grzegorz Niedzwiedzki Piotr Szrek Katarzyna Narkiewicz Marek Narkiewicz Per E Ahlberg 2010 Tetrapod trackways from the early Middle Devonian period of Poland Nature 463 7277 43 8 Bibcode 2010Natur 463 43N doi 10 1038 nature08623 PMID 20054388 S2CID 4428903 Rex Dalton January 6 2010 Discovery pushes back date of first four legged animal Nature News Archived from the original on 2010 01 14 Retrieved January 8 2010 Clack 2012 p 140harvnb error no target CITEREFClack2012 help A Small Step for Lungfish a Big Step for the Evolution of Walking Archived from the original on 2017 07 03 Retrieved 2018 02 28 King H M Shubin N H Coates M I Hale M E 2011 Behavioral evidence for the evolution of walking and bounding before terrestriality in sarcopterygian fishes Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 108 52 21146 21151 Bibcode 2011PNAS 10821146K doi 10 1073 pnas 1118669109 PMC 3248479 PMID 22160688 Retallack Gregory May 2011 Woodland Hypothesis for Devonian Tetrapod Evolution PDF Journal of Geology University of Chicago Press 119 3 235 258 Bibcode 2011JG 119 235R doi 10 1086 659144 S2CID 128827936 Archived PDF from the original on 2013 05 17 Retrieved January 1 2012 A New Theory Emerges for Where Some Fish Became 4 limbed Creatures ScienceNewsline December 28 2011 Archived from the original on 2016 03 04 Retrieved January 17 2013 George r Mcghee Jr 12 November 2013 When the Invasion of Land Failed The Legacy of the Devonian Extinctions ISBN 9780231160575 Archived from the original on 2019 12 27 Retrieved 2016 03 01 Research project The Mid Palaeozoic biotic crisis Setting the trajectory of Tetrapod evolution Archived from the original on 2013 12 12 Retrieved 2014 05 31 Lennie Kendra I Manske Sarah L Mansky Chris F Anderson Jason S 2021 Locomotory behaviour of early tetrapods from Blue Beach Nova Scotia revealed by novel microanatomical analysis Royal Society Open Science 8 5 210281 doi 10 1098 rsos 210281 PMC 8150034 PMID 34084552 a b Dimichele William A Cecil C Blaine Montanez Isabel P Falcon Lang Howard J 2010 Cyclic changes in Pennsylvanian paleoclimate and effects on floristic dynamics in tropical Pangaea International Journal of Coal Geology 83 2 3 329 344 doi 10 1016 j coal 2010 01 007 S2CID 64358884 Davies Neil S Gibling Martin R 2013 The sedimentary record of Carboniferous rivers Continuing influence of land plant evolution on alluvial processes and Palaeozoic ecosystems Earth Science Reviews 120 40 79 Bibcode 2013ESRv 120 40D doi 10 1016 j earscirev 2013 02 004 Tabor Neil J Poulsen Christopher J 2008 Palaeoclimate across the Late Pennsylvanian Early Permian tropical palaeolatitudes A review of climate indicators their distribution and relation to palaeophysiographic climate factors Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology 268 3 4 293 310 Bibcode 2008PPP 268 293T doi 10 1016 j palaeo 2008 03 052 Gibling M R Davies N S Falcon Lang H J Bashforth A R Dimichele W A Rygel M C Ielpi A 2014 Palaeozoic co evolution of rivers and vegetation a synthesis of current knowledge Proceedings of the Geologists Association 125 5 6 524 533 doi 10 1016 j pgeola 2013 12 003 Purves William K Orians Gordon H Heller H Craig 1995 Life The Science of Biology 4th ed Sunderland MA USA Sinauer Associates pp 622 625 ISBN 978 0 7167 2629 6 Sahney S Benton M J Falcon Lang H J 2010 Rainforest collapse triggered Pennsylvanian tetrapod diversification in Euramerica Geology 38 12 1079 1082 Bibcode 2010Geo 38 1079S doi 10 1130 G31182 1 Pearson Marianne R Benson Roger B J Upchurch Paul Frobisch Jorg Kammerer Christian F 2013 Reconstructing the diversity of early terrestrial herbivorous tetrapods Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology 372 42 49 Bibcode 2013PPP 372 42P doi 10 1016 j palaeo 2012 11 008 a b c Sahney S Benton M J 2008 Recovery from the most profound mass extinction of all time Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences 275 1636 759 65 doi 10 1098 rspb 2007 1370 PMC 2596898 PMID 18198148 Archived PDF from the original on 2011 02 22 Lehrmann D J Ramezan J Bowring S A et al December 2006 Timing of recovery from the end Permian extinction Geochronologic and biostratigraphic constraints from south China Geology 34 12 1053 6 Bibcode 2006Geo 34 1053L doi 10 1130 G22827A 1 External links Edit Media related to Evolution of tetrapods at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Evolution of tetrapods amp oldid 1131437333, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.