One particular fossilised 'missing link' found in India suggests that the last whale precursors took to the water in times of danger but came onto land to give birth and eat.
Business
Standard : Whales belong in the ocean, right? That may be
true today, but cetaceans (whales, dolphins, porpoises) actually
descended from four
legged mammals that once lived on land. New research published in
Current Biology reports the discovery in Peru of an entirely new
species of ancestral whale that straddled land and sea, providing
insight into the weird evolutionary journey of our mammalian friends.
We
might think of them as smooth, two-flippered ocean swimmers that
struggle to even survive the Thames, but whales originated more than
50m years ago from artiodactyls – land-dwelling, hooved mammals.
Initially,
whales’
ancestors resembled small deer, with four toes, each one ending in a
small hoof. One particular fossilised “missing link” found in
India suggests that the last whale precursors took to the water in
times of danger but came onto land to give birth and eat. They would
spend considerable time wading in shallow water, foraging for aquatic
vegetation and invertebrates, and eventually small fish and
amphibians.
The
oldest prehistoric whale fossils date from 53m years ago, and were
found at sites in the northern Indian Himalayas, and present day
Pakistan. The fossil record tells the story of a gradual transition
from wading to living most of the time in deeper water, like otters
or beavers, while retaining the ability to walk on land.
An
ocean journey
Around
42 million years ago, and still land-worthy, the newly discovered
Peregocetus pacificus set off on an epic journey to the other side of
the world. In the Middle Eocene era (roughly 48 to 38m years ago),
Africa and South America were half as far apart, but that is still an
impressive swim? for an animal less than three metres long that was
not completely adapted to marine life.
The
hind limbs of 42.6m-year-old P. pacificus were not much shorter than
its front legs, and it had tiny hooves on each toe and finger,
suggesting that it was still quite capable of hoisting itself out of
the water and trotting about on land. However, other features of the
skeleton suggest that it was well adapted to an aquatic life. For
example, its hind feet bones had ridges to which ligaments and
tendons would attach, suggesting it had webbed feet. Its beaver-like
tail bones bear signs that it was used as a powerful aid to swimming,
though there is no evidence as to whether or not it had a tail fluke
like today’s whales.
P.
pacificus was carnivorous, as its sharp, scissor-like teeth
demonstrate.
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