[The title
was written by my editor. Evolution is not a force. It’s like saying eating
allowed a child to grow.]
A recent report suggests that modern day birds owe their lack of teeth to
changes in an ancestor that lived some 116 million years ago.
by John
Tyburski
Copyright © Daily
Digest News, KPR Media, LLC. All rights reserved.
Today’s
birds share a common ancestor that had a more toothy smile, suggests a recent
study of fossil genes. Researchers led by biologists at the University of
California Riverside and Montclair State University discovered through a fossil
genetics investigation that the genes responsible for tooth development were
turned off in birds and a few other vertebrates around 116 million years ago.
Edentulism,
or the absence of teeth, is thought to have evolved on many different occasions
in vertebrates including birds, turtles, and some mammals such as baleen
whales, pangolins, and anteaters. There is an ongoing debate about when birds
went “edentulist” because the fossil record is spotty.
Using the
degraded remnants of tooth genes in birds, the investigators set out to
determine when and how birds may have gave up their teeth. In a report published
on December 12 in Science Magazine, the team suggests that the teeth
were lost in birds as they shed weight in an effort to take to the skies in
flight.
“One of
the larger lessons of our finding is that ‘dead genes,’ like the remnants of
dead organisms that are preserved in the fossil record, have a story to tell,”
said Mark Springer, professor of biology and one of the lead authors of the
study. “DNA from the crypt is a powerful tool for unlocking secrets of
evolutionary history.”
The
researchers focused their investigation on the fossil of Archaeopteryx,
an ancestor of contemporary birds found in Germany, and found that tooth loss
came down to the inactivation of six key genes.
“Ever
since the discovery of the fossil bird Archaeopteryx in 1861, it has been
clear that living birds are descended from toothed ancestors,” said Springer.
“However, the history of tooth loss in the ancestry of modern birds has
remained elusive for more than 150 years.”
Springer
noted that the six genes responsible for tooth formation are expressed in the
American alligator.
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