New
Jurassic Salamander Is World's Oldest
By Jennifer
Welsh
A newly discovered 157-million-year-old salamander is the
oldest of its kind and would've swum with the aquatic beasts of the Jurassic.
The
discovery supports the idea that this order diverged from other salamanders
earlier than thought, the researchers said.
Six
specimens of this new species, now called Beiyanerpeton
jianpingensis, were discovered in the Tiaojishan Formation, in Liaoning
Province, China. Some other salamander specimens discovered in the area are
quite a bit smaller than B. jianpingensis,
suggesting they are either juveniles or a smaller species. The
salamander's scientific name comes from "beiyan," an ancient name for
the area in which it was discovered, and "herpeton," the Greek word
for creeping animal.
With a snout-to-pelvis length (excluding its tail) of 4
inches (10 centimeters), this salamander would've looked similar to modern
salamanders. "All salamanders look alike in
having short limbs and a normally developed tail," study researcher Ke-Qin
Gao, of Peking University in Beijing, toldLiveScience in an email.
"In that respect, a reconstruction of our new
salamander would look very much like
salamanders we see today — you can recognize it as a salamander easily,"
with slight anatomical differences.
The
fossil was found in the bed of an ancient lake, and because of the shape of its
tail and other anatomical features, including gills, the researchers note that
it probably lived in an aquatic habitat.
It is the oldest example of the suborder
of salamanders called Salamandroidea, which are still alive today with about 557 living
species. The previous record holder for oldest salamander is a fossil
discovered in Spain, which dates to about 114 million years ago, meaning the
new specimen extends the fossil record for salamanders by 40 million years.
"The
previously known salamandroid from
Spain is quite different from ours. They cannot be classified in the same
family," Gao said. "In terms of evolution, ours is much older and
much more primitive."
The age of this fossil stacks up well with data from
molecular experiments, which compared genes from modern Salamandroidea with a group of related salamanders, the Cryptobranchoidea, to determine how long ago the two groups diverged.
Different experiments indicated different results: The two groups evolved into separate species either 140 million or 183
million years ago. The new example of Salamandroidea indicates the
earliest date, 183 million years ago, is more likely.
The
species is described today (March 12) in the journal Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences
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