The coelacanth: A living fossil of a fish - Erin Eastwood

507,424 views ・ 2014-07-29

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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The dead coming back to life sounds scary.
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But for scientists, it can be a wonderful opportunity.
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Of course, we're not talking about zombies.
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Rather, this particular opportunity came in the unlikely form
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of large, slow-moving fish called the coelacanth.
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This oddity dates back 360 million years,
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and was believed to have died out during the same mass extinction event
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that wiped out the dinosaurs 65 million years ago.
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To biologists and paleontologists, this creature was a very old and fascinating
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but entirely extinct fish, forever fossilized.
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That is, until 1938 when Marjorie Courtenay-Latimer, a curator at a South African museum,
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came across a prehistoric looking, gleaming blue fish hauled up at the nearby docks.
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She had a hunch that this strange, 1.5 meter long specimen was important
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but couldn't preserve it in time to be studied and had it taxidermied.
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When she finally was able to reach J.L.B. Smith, a local fish expert,
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he was able to confirm, at first site, that the creature was indeed a coelacanth.
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But it was another 14 years before a live specimen was found in the Comoros Islands,
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allowing scientists to closely study a creature
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that had barely evolved in 300 million years.
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A living fossil.
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Decades later, a second species was found near Indonesia.
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The survival of creatures thought extinct for so long
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proved to be one of the biggest discoveries of the century.
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But the fact that the coelacanth came back from the dead
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isn't all that makes this fish so astounding.
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Even more intriguing is the fact that genetically and morphologically,
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the coelacanth has more in common with four-limbed vertebrates
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than almost any other fish, and its smaller genome is ideal for study.
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This makes the coelacanth a powerful link between aquatic and land vertebrates,
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a living record of their transition from water to land millions of years ago.
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The secret to this transition is in the fins.
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While the majority of ocean fish fall into the category of ray-finned fishes,
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coelacanths are part of a much smaller, evolutionarily distinct group with thicker fins
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known as lobe-finned fish.
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Six of the coelacanth's fins contain bones organized much like our limbs,
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with one bone connecting the fin to the body,
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another two connecting the bone to the tip of the fin,
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and several small, finger-like bones at the tip.
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Not only are those fins structured in pairs to move in a synchronized way,
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the coelacanth even shares the same genetic sequence
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that promotes limb development in land vertebrates.
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So although the coelacanth itself isn't a land-walker,
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its fins do resemble those of its close relatives
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who first hauled their bodies onto land
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with the help of these sturdy, flexible appendages,
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acting as an evolutionary bridge to the land lovers that followed.
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So that's how this prehistoric fish helps explain the evolutionary movement
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of vertebrates from water to land.
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Over millions of years, that transition
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led to the spread of all four-limbed animals, called tetrapods,
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like amphibians, birds, and even the mammals that are our ancestors.
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There's even another powerful clue
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in that unlike most fish, coelacanths don't lay eggs,
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instead giving birth to live, young pups, just like mammals.
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And this prehistoric fish will continue to provide us with fascinating information
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about the migration of vertebrates out of the ocean over 300 million years ago.
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A journey that ultimately drove our own evolution, survival and existence.
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Today the coelacanth remains the symbol of the wondrous mysteries that remain
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to be uncovered by science.
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With so much left to learn about this fish, the ocean depths and evolution itself,
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who knows what other well-kept secrets our future discoveries may bring to life!
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