August 15, 2024
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Tardigrade fossils reveal when ‘water bears’ became immortal
252 million years ago, tardigrades may have used this strange trick to avoid extinction
Microscopic tardigrades – a family of plump, eight-legged arthropods – are nearly invulnerable, and their superhuman abilities may have helped them survive one of the worst mass extinctions in Earth’s history, according to a new analysis of tardigrade fossils in amber, the first study to estimate when this ability evolved.
Tardigrades, also known as aquatic tardigrades, can withstand extreme heat, cold, pressure, and radiation. They survive harsh environments through a process called cryptobiosis, in which they expel most of the water from their bodies and enter a state of metabolic suspension. There are two lineages of tardigrades that have this ability.
There are only four known tardigrade fossils, all preserved in amber, two of which were found in Canada in the 1940s in amber pebbles dating to between 84 and 71 million years ago. One of the tardigrades found in the pebble was See more It was discovered in 1963. The other was too small to identify at the time. Mark MapaloGraduate student at the Harvard Museum of Comparative Zoology.
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For new research in Nature Communications Biology, Mapalo and his colleagues used high-contrast microscopy Reveal previously unseen details The claws of both specimens show “a very important taxonomic feature for tardigrades,” Mapalo says. Because tardigrades’ body shapes have changed very little over millions of years, the scientists’ new images of the claw’s shape provide important information about where these amber-bound fossils may have come from, the University of Chicago organismal biologist says. Jasmine NirodiNot involved in the study.
The authors determined that the small tardigrade represents a new genus and species. Aerobius dactylusThey also revised B. RegiDescription and classification of the tardigrades based on the claw articulations. Both species are classified in the same superfamily Hypsibioidea, B. Regi They have now been officially moved to the family Hypsibiidae. This reorganization places the small tardigrades in the same major lineage (class Eutardigrada) as the larger tardigrades, which researchers previously thought belonged to a separate lineage.
This realigned the tardigrade family tree, allowing the researchers to calculate when the two lineages diverged and determine the latest date for the likely acquisition of cryptic life. Their study suggests that cryptic life in tardigrades emerged during the Carboniferous Period (359 to 299 million years ago), predating a devastating event known as the Permian Extinction, or “Great Dying,” which occurred about 252 million years ago. The authors suggest that cryptic life may have helped tardigrades survive this event, which wiped out 96% of marine and 70% of terrestrial life.
Mapalo says studying the evolution of cryptic living is difficult, in part because tardigrade fossils are so scarce. Finding more fossils will help scientists pinpoint details about the emergence of this unique survival strategy. “I hope that sharing our findings will help others learn that tardigrade fossils exist and that there are others yet to be found,” he says.