In Our Time

The Fish-Tetrapod Transition

5 snips
Nov 17, 2022
In this fascinating discussion, Emily Rayfield, a Professor of Palaeobiology, and Michael Coates, Chair of Organismal Biology, delve into the evolution from fish to tetrapods. They explore how fish adapted to land around 400 million years ago, transforming fins into limbs and swim bladders into lungs. Significant fossil discoveries like Tiktaalik and Ichthyostega reveal crucial anatomical changes. The conversation highlights modern tools revolutionizing fossil studies and the remarkable journey that laid the foundation for the diversity of life we know today.
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INSIGHT

Evolutionary Importance

  • The fish-tetrapod transition, around 400 million years ago, is a profound evolutionary shift documented by fossils.
  • This transition, from fish with fins to tetrapods with limbs, paved the way for life on land, including humans.
INSIGHT

Devonian World

  • During the Devonian period, the Earth's landmasses were primarily in the south, with northern regions closer to the equator.
  • Early land ecosystems consisted of simple plants and arthropods, paving the way for the arrival of vertebrates.
INSIGHT

Key Tetrapod Features

  • Tetrapods, a specialized type of fish, evolved limbs with digits, necks, a sacrum, tongues, middle ears, and lungs.
  • Their backbone structure adapted for land by resisting gravity, unlike the springy backbone of fish.
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