'Living fossils' display unusual behavior."Living fossils' display unusual behavior They swim backwards, they drift upside down, they even perform an underwater version of a headstand. Such are the antics that West German scientists observed when they set out in a submersible submersible, small, mobile undersea research vessel capable of functioning in the ocean depths. Development of a great variety of submersibles during the later 1950s and 1960s came about as a result of improved technology and in response to a demonstrated need for to study a primitive fish that was once thought extinct. Sometimes called "living fossils,' these are the only remaining examples of cross-opterygians --an ancient line of fish that many scientists believe spawned the first tetrapods, or four-legged land animals. This is the first time scientists have observed them in their habitat, and there is hope that these fish, called coelacanths, will aid in understanding the vertebrate transition from water to land. Paleontologists had believed that coelacanths died out around 60 million years ago, until a living specimen was discovered off the coast of Madagascar in 1938. Since then, scientists have studied the behavior of line-caught coelacanths by releasing them at the surface. But coelacanths normally live under great pressure at depths of 200 meters, and they die within several days of surface existence. The West German scientists, from the Max Planck Noun 1. Max Planck - German physicist whose explanation of blackbody radiation in the context of quantized energy emissions initiated quantum theory (1858-1947) Max Karl Ernst Ludwig Planck, Planck Institute in Seewiesen and the Zoological Institute of the University of the Saarland in Saarbruken, performed 40 dives near the Comore islands, which lie to the northwest of Madagascar. They observed six of the coelacanths for a total of 80 hours, capturing the sometimes inexplicable behavior of this nocturnal creature in still photography, videotape and film. In the past, scientists had speculated that coelacanths might use a pair of pectoral fins (Zool.) fins situated on the sides, behind the gills. See Illust. under Fin. See also: Pectoral and a pair of pelvic fins to crawl along the ocean bottom. The fins are connected to the body by fleshy fleshy (flesh´e) 1. pertaining to or resembling flesh. 2. characterized by abundant flesh. lobes, which are believed to be the evolutionary forerunners of limbs. The West German team found that "paired fins are not used for locomotion locomotion Any of various animal movements that result in progression from one place to another. Locomotion is classified as either appendicular (accomplished by special appendages) or axial (achieved by changing the body shape). on the bottom such as crawling or stalking.' Yet a close analysis of the film did reveal that opposite pectoral pectoral /pec·to·ral/ (pek´ter-il) thoracic. pec·to·ral adj. 1. Relating to or situated in the breast or chest. 2. and pelvic fins sometimes moved in synchrony synchrony /syn·chro·ny/ (-krah-ne) the occurrence of two events simultaneously or with a fixed time interval between them. atrioventricular (AV) synchrony , a pattern common to horses and other tetrapods but rare among fish, say the researchers in the Sept. 24 NATURE. Other researchers question the relevance of this observed behavior, contending that coelacanths are distantly related to tetrapods, if at all. However, say the West German scientists, "Such coordination could indicate another preadaptation pre·ad·ap·ta·tion n. A characteristic evolved by an ancestral species or population that serves an adaptive though different function in a descendant species or population. in the crossopterygian group that could have facilitated the transition to locomotion on land.' Photo: Photographed in their native habitat, coelacanths average 1.5 meters long. |
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