Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Solar Energy News .




EARLY EARTH
'True grit' erodes assumptions about evolution
by Sandra Hines for UW News
Seattle WA (SPX) Mar 07, 2013


University of Washington researchers collect samples from Gran Barranca, Argentina, that offers access to layers of soils, plant remains, volcanic ash and sand going back millions of years. The section pictured represents 800,000 years of layering and is mainly composed of volcanic ash deposited by wind and rivers. Photo courtesy R Madden/U of Chicago.

Dining on field grasses would be ruinous to human teeth, but mammals such as horses, rhinos and gazelles evolved long, strong teeth that are up to the task. New research led by the University of Washington challenges the 140-year-old assumption that finding fossilized remains of prehistoric animals with such teeth meant the animals were living in grasslands and savannas.

Instead it appears certain South American mammals evolved the teeth in response to the gritty dust and volcanic ash they encountered while feeding in an ancient tropical forest.

The new work was conducted in Argentina where scientists had thought Earth's first grasslands emerged 38 million years ago, an assumption based on fossils of these specialized teeth. But the grasslands didn't exist. Instead there were tropical forests rich with palms, bamboos and gingers, according to Caroline Stromberg, UW assistant professor of biology and lead author of an article in Nature Communications.

"The assumption about grasslands and the evolution of these teeth was based on animal fossils," Stromberg said. "No one had looked in detail at evidence from the plant record before. Our findings show that you shouldn't assume adaptations always came about in the same way, that the trigger is the same environment every time."

To handle a lifetime of rough abrasion, the specialized teeth - called high-crowned cheek teeth - are especially long and mostly up in the animals' gums when they are young. As chewing surfaces of the teeth wear away, more of the tooth emerges from the gums until the crowns are used up. In each tooth, bone-like dentin and tough enamel are complexly folded and layered to create strong ridged surfaces for chewing. Human teeth have short crowns and enamel only on the outside of each tooth.

In Argentina, mammals apparently developed specialized teeth 20 million years or more before grasslands appeared, Stromberg said. This was different from her previous work in North America and western Eurasia where she found the emergence of grasslands coincided with the early ancestors of horses and other animals evolving specialized teeth. The cause and effect, however, took 4 million years, considerably more lag time than previously thought.

The idea that specialized teeth could have evolved in response to eating dust and grit on plants and the ground is not new. In the case of Argentine mammals, Stromberg and her co-authors hypothesize that the teeth adapted to handle volcanic ash because so much is present at the study site. For example, some layers of volcanic ash are as thick as 20 feet (six meters). In other layers, soils and roots were just starting to develop when they were smothered with more ash.

Chewing grasses is abrasive because grasses take up more silica from soils than most other plants. Silica forms minute particles inside many plants called phytoliths that, among other things, help some plants stand upright and form part of the protective coating on seeds.

Phytoliths vary in appearance under a microscope depending on the kind of plant. When plants die and decay, the phytoliths remain as part of the soil layer. In work funded by the National Science Foundation, Stromberg and her colleagues collected samples from Argentina's Gran Barranca, literally "Great Cliff," that offers access to layers of soil, ash and sand going back millions of years.

The phytoliths they found in 38-million-year-old layers - when ancient mammals in that part of the world developed specialized teeth - were overwhelmingly from tropical forests, Stromberg said.

"In modern grasslands and savannas you'd expect at least 35 to 40 percent - more likely well over 50 percent - of grass phytoliths. The fact we have so little evidence of grasses is very diagnostic of a forested habitat," she said.

The emergence of grasslands and the evolution of specialized teeth in mammals are regarded as a classic example of co-evolution, one that has occurred in various places around the world. However, as the new work shows, "caution is required when using this functional trait for habitat reconstruction," the co-authors write.

Other co-authors are Regan Dunn, a UW doctoral candidate; Richard Madden, University of Chicago; Matthew Kohn, Boise State University; and Alfredo Carlini, National University of La Plata, Argentina.

.


Related Links
University of Washington
Explore The Early Earth at TerraDaily.com






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








EARLY EARTH
Mineral diversity clue to early Earth chemistry
Washington DC (SPX) Mar 07, 2013
Mineral evolution is a new way to look at our planet's history. It's the study of the increasing diversity and characteristics of Earth's near-surface minerals, from the dozen that arrived on interstellar dust particles when the Solar System was formed to the more than 4,700 types existing today. New research on a mineral called molybdenite by a team led by Robert Hazen at Carnegie's Geoph ... read more


EARLY EARTH
Biofuel crops could affect Brazil climate

Biomass Analysis Tool Is Faster, More Precise

MSU and PHYCO2 Collaborate on Algae Growth Demonstration Project

NASA Begins Flight Research Campaign Using Alternate Jet Fuel

EARLY EARTH
Germany eyes new Internet industrial revolution

Brown unveils novel wireless brain sensor

Blueprint for an artificial brain

The Space Robotics on the MMMMove

EARLY EARTH
Prysmian Gets New Contract For Connection Of Offshore Wind Park

RMT Safely Constructs Seven Wind Projects in 2012

Scientists have overestimated capacity of wind farms to generate power

Rethinking wind power

EARLY EARTH
Sometimes, the rubber meets the road when you don't want it to

Drive across U.S. to use no gasoline

Toyota shake-up signals new direction: analysts

World car sales should grow 3% this year

EARLY EARTH
Bulgaria abandons Russia-Greece oil pipeline project

Man-made material pushes the bounds of superconductivity

Trouble brews for Iran-Pakistan pipeline

Coal-fired power plants making Europeans sick: report

EARLY EARTH
Majority in Taiwan against new atomic plant: polls

Vattenfall axes 2,500 jobs amid low electricity prices

US may face inevitable nuclear power exit

Taiwan nuke power plants to face OECD stress tests

EARLY EARTH
Australian group wants carbon trading

Chile court halts huge power plant project

Ireland launches energy efficiency fund

Obama names, top energy, environment and budget officials

EARLY EARTH
NASA Eyes Declining Vegetation In The Eastern United States From 2000 To 2010

EU cracks down on illegal timber trade

Science synthesis to help guide land management of US forests

Declining Vegetation Across The Eastern US Observed




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement