The rapid expansion of DNA testing capability and general efficiency
is now so mature that we are actually mopping up some of the big
obvious tasks. I have no doubt that this will soon be expanded to
birds in particular and all land animals out there.
We continue to confirm that the mammal did not become a factor at all
until post K-T. I am not so sure that that will hold up simply
because egg eating works so well for rats in particular. That and
insect eating and we can anticipate a very successful mammal and many
small successful reptiles who are out there.
What the K-T provided was a newly reborn biome with ample scope for
larger creatures which was then filled fastest by the mammals in
competition with the birds who also went to giantism.
Now the task of sorting out and correcting our morphological data is
well begun also.
Largest-ever study
of mammalian ancestry completed by renowned research team
by Staff Writers
Pittsburgh PA (SPX) Feb 11, 2013
This is an artist's rendering of the hypothetical placental ancestor, a small insect-eating animal. The research team reconstructed the anatomy of the animal by mapping traits onto the evolutionary tree most strongly supported by the combined phenomic and genomic data and comparing the features in placental mammals with those seen in their closest relatives. Credit: Carl Buell.
A groundbreaking
six-year research collaboration has produced the most complete
picture yet of the evolution of placental mammals, the group that
includes humans.
Placental mammals are
the largest branch of the mammalian family tree, with more than 5,100
living species. Researchers from Carnegie Museum of Natural History
are among the team of 23 that took part in this extensive
interdisciplinary effort that utilizes molecular (DNA) and
morphological (anatomy) data on an extraordinary scale.
By combining these two
types of data scientists reconstructed, to an unprecedented level of
detail, the family tree of placental mammals. This study explored
thousands of characteristics of the anatomy of both living and
extinct placental mammals.
This new project
produced a more complete picture of mammalian history and provides a
huge dataset that will become the starting point of research for a
number of scientific questions, including those of vital importance
today: how mammals may have survived climate change in the past and
what may that mean for our future. The paper appears today in the
journal Science.
The collaboration is
part of the Assembling the Tree of Life (ATOL) project funded by the
National Science Foundation.
Joining forces,
joining research
Today's article reveals the final results of the six-year ATOL project. The study began with two teams organizing data from two distinct approaches to evolutionary research: molecular data (DNA), and morphological data (anatomical features).
"In the field of
mammal research, there had been a big divide between people working
with DNA and others working on morphology," explains John Wible,
PhD, Curator of Mammals at Carnegie Museum of Natural History and
co-author on the paper. "They just weren't working with each
other until now."
The molecular team
collected DNA sequences of living animals and the morphology team
examined the anatomy of both living and extinct mammals. The
molecular team only sampled living mammals, because genetic material
can't be extracted from fossils older than 30,000 years,. Thus, to
include fossils, morphological information was essential. Researchers
in morphology deal with individual physical features, from bone
length to types of teeth to the presence of stripes in the fur; each
one of these features is termed a 'character.' By collecting as many
characters as possible and comparing their variation among dozens of
specimens, relationships between species can be tested and broader
patterns emerge.
The ATOL project
became a morphological powerhouse. Generally, a group of 500
characters is considered to be a large dataset. The morphology
researchers on the ATOL project generated an unprecedented 4,500
characters. Once both DNA and morphological datasets were produced,
the resulting combined matrix provided an unprecedented amount of
information for each of the 83 mammals included in the study.
"It's not that we
hadn't combined morphology with DNA before." clarifies co-author
Michelle Spaulding, PhD, the Rea Post-doctoral Fellow at Carnegie
Museum of Natural History. "This time, we ratcheted up the
amount of morphological detail phenomenally, providing a larger
anatomical base for the study as compared with DNA than is typical.."
With the new Tree of
Life matrix, researchers now have greater context for the fragmentary
fossils they have in hand-often scant evidence such as a few teeth or
a skull fragment-potentially shedding light on little-known species
that have yet to find a solid home in the evolutionary tree.
Ancestral origins
estimated
Thanks to the incredible amount of anatomical information collected, the researchers were able to predict the appearance of the most recent common ancestor of all placental mammals. Explains Spaulding, "We have all these placentals alive today, from elephants to shrews, from things that fly to things that swim. What could the common ancestor of these things that are so different possibly look like?"
"That's the power
of 4,500 characters," says Wible. "We looked at all aspects
of mammalian anatomy, from the skull and skeleton, to the teeth, to
internal organs, to muscles, and even fur patterns. Using the new
family tree of mammals in tandem with this anatomical data, we were
able to reconstruct what this common placental ancestor may have
looked like."
The scientists were
able to work with an artist to approximate the appearance of this
ancestor. While only hypothetical, the illustrated concept for this
ancestor-from body size to fur type to number of teeth-could not have
been achieved prior to the Herculean task of developing the matrix.
Earliest date for
placentals
"We focused our study on the time around the Cretaceous-Tertiary (KT) boundary, 65 million years ago," states Spaulding, "Molecular and morphological based studies differ on the age when placentals first appeared. Molecular studies place the origin in the mid-Cretaceous, when dinosaurs still dominated. On the other hand, morphological studies have routinely found no evidence of any placental fossils in this time period, and instead place the placental origin after the mass extinction at the close of the Cretaceous that ended dinosaur dominance."
One major goal of this
project was to address this controversy and results found that
placental mammals appeared after the KT boundary, implying that the
mass extinction was a critical event in mammalian evolutionary
history.
New website an
essential tool
The study was conducted utilizing the web application Morphobank (www.morphobank.org). The matrix is freely available online and provides a road map to the Tree of Life team's findings by precisely outlining how the team defined each of the more than 4,500 characters in the dataset. Proving that a picture is worth a thousand words, the majority of characters include illustrations.
As revolutionary as
the study, the website also marks a new era in how collaborative
research may proceed. "We couldn't have accomplished this
without Morphobank," lauds Spaulding. "This website allowed
members of the team, spread all over the globe, to work
simultaneously."
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