When my family and I visited the Monterey Bay Aquarium in California, we saw a ton of really cool things! So let's take a look at some pictures of some of these animals now in our very first....Aquarium Spotlight! First off, the sea otters! They were really super cute and were swimming ALL over the enclosure, as it was feeding time, and some of the zookeepers were doing a feeding demonstration with training.
Sea otters weren't all that they had, though! Another thing that the Monterey Bay Aquarium had was a pretty good jellyfish exhibit.
They also had one of my most favorite animals, the African penguin!
They also had a few fairly large tanks too, with large schools of fish that looked super amazing and really pretty. My mom tried to get some good shots of them, but it was dark and they didn't really come out super well.
Finally, the other main thing that I thought was worthy of mention were the sea turtles, they had some pretty cool sea turtles!
Photo credit for all of these pictures goes to Julie Neher.
Showing posts with label Fish. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fish. Show all posts
Friday, February 8, 2013
Aquarium Spotlight: Monterey Bay Aquarium
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Monday, December 10, 2012
Top 10 Favorite Dinosaurs by Zack Neher (Part 3)
Part three of my Top Ten Favorite Dinosaurs list. Enjoy!
3. Masiakasaurus
A fairly small dinosaur at only around six feet, Masakisaurus knopfleri, as discussed IN A PREVIOUS POST, was named for the famous musician Mark Knopfler. The animal, found in Madagascar, was named in 2001 by Matthew Carrano, Catherine A. Forster, and Scott Sampson, the author of Dinosaur Odyssey and the dude from Dinosaur Train. Living on what was still an island, the little dinosaur lived about 70 MYA during the Late Cretaceous Period, and was a contemoporary of the abelisaur Majungasaurus, the bird-like Rahonavis, and the sauropod Rapetosaurus. Although Masiakasaurus sounds pretty unremarkable thus far, a quick glance at the picture below (which many of you have no doubt already done) says otherwise: Masiakasaurus definitely had some funky teeth! These teeth are clearly not suited tearing into food like the teeth of Allosaurus or Velociraptor would be, and many paleontologists (including myself, even though I am not really a paleontologist. I guess it would be better to say "many paleontologists, paleontologists-in-training, and myself." There, much better.) believe that these weird, pointy teeth are an evolutionary adaptation to a piscivorous (fish-based) diet. A look at various marine reptiles such as the plesiosaurs (like Elasmosaurus) and Liopleurodon show a similar pattern of interlocking teeth that point outside of the mouth. Excellent when it comes to catching fish, and not so excellent when it comes to most, if not all, other diets, be they meat- or plant-based.
TO BE CONTINUED IN PART 4
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Thursday, October 11, 2012
The Denver Gem and Mineral Show Part 2: The Piscivores (Excepting Penguins)
As we started talking about a few weeks ago, my friend Masaki Kleinkopf and I were able to visit the Denver Gem and Mineral Show at the Denver Merchandise Mart. Last time, we talked about the giant ammonites, the baby eryops that Dr. Robert Bakker was working on, the gliding Indonesian lizards of the genus Draco and the pterosaurs that evolved from creatures purportedly much like this millions of years ago. Today, we are going to talk about all of the piscivorous animals that we saw there, except for the fossil penguin that I saw there. Knowing me, that would easily take up one whole post of its own there. Keep in mind throughout this post that I'm not certain for all of these animals that they actually eat fish, I just know that the large groups that they belong to often eat fish. Today, we are going to be looking at the mosasaurs, crocodilians, pterosaurs, sea lions, other fish, sharks, and the dreaded piscivorous dinosaur Spinosaurus.
MESSAGE FROM ZACK FROM THE FUTURE: Hello, everyone. This is Zack Neher. I have travelled to this post from the future. I wanted to give you a link to the Homebase for these posts. I am like Rose Tyler, leaving clues in the form of Bad Wolf. Except this is not quite like that at all really. Anyways. The Homebase for the series is HERE.
| Myself next to a gigantic mosasaur skull |
| I am pretty sure that this is the skull of a mosasaur , anyway.....it looks more like a mosasaur skull than the skull of a crocodilian, if you ask me |
| A mosasaur jaw, from Morocco by the looks of it |
| A mosasaur skull (Platecarpus, if memory serves, but it is entirely possible that I am wildly off) in front of a fossil ray |
| Another huge mosasaur skull |
We also got to see the teeth of a piscivorous pterosaur. The teeth of a piscivore are usually different from those of other carnivorous animals due to their conical shape. The teeth of the fish eaters, like those of crocodilians and dolphins, are usually conical in shape, to prevent prey from struggling out of their grasp.
| The teeth of a piscivorous pterosaurs |
Below are the skulls of various crocodilians.
| The skulls of these dudes seem like they should be out of a cartoon or something, they are so weird and comic looking! |
| Imagotaria sp., from the Miocene to Pliocene in the Atacama region of Chile |
| Imagotaria sp., from the Miocene to Pliocene in the Atacama region of Chile |
Next, a picture of a pair of fossil jellyfish!
| Fossil jellyfish! |
be. (Did you see that alliteration? My language arts teacher would be most impressed). I discuss both Spinosaurus and Carcharodontosaurus in two previous posts, which you can look at HERE FOR SPINOSAURUS and HERE FOR SPINOSAURUS AND CARCHARODONTOSAURUS.
| The teeth of Spinosaurus. Actually in this shot, it looks as if most or all of these teeth belong to Spinosaurus. |
And now for some pictures of the teeth of Megalodon, the largest shark that is ever known to have lived! I have talked about Megalodon in the past, click HERE to learn more.
Now for some random ones.
| It's a fish eat fish world out there |
| A pair of shark jaws. I am not certain as I don't remember at all and they are unlabeled, but I believe them to be jaws of sand tiger sharks. Again, I could be totally off on this! |
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Wednesday, August 8, 2012
Top Ten: Extinct Sea Monsters (Part 5 of 5)
Our final edition of "Top Ten: Extinct Sea Monsters!
9. Tanystropheus - Living during the Middle Triassic Period, Tanystropheus is somewhat of a misfit amongst this group, as he is not really a sea-monster, and was, at most, a semi-aquatic animal (think otters). Purportedly piscivorous, Tanystropheus fossils are usually found in semi-aquatic sites. Its neck has been likened to that of the Plesiosaurs, like Elasmosaurus. They would all use their necks to surprise a group of fish, long before the fish would be able to see the body of the reptile. Remains have been discovered throughout France, Germany, and Italy, amongst other places.
10. Tylosaurus - Interestingly enough, the closest living relative of the extinct mosasaurs, of which Tylosaurus is a member, are the monitor lizards, like the Komodo dragon. Both the monitor lizards and the mosasaurs have a third eye on the top of their heads, although it just looks like a little white dot on the top of the head of the monitor lizard. It doesn't work in the same fashion as their other eyes, however. Look towards a light (not the sun, because apparently that can actually be harmful) and close your eyes. You can still still some light, right? Now, move your hand back and forth in front of your face, between your eyes and the light. Can you see how the light changes? You can't see anything more distinct than the fact that something moved between you and that light. That is what the third eye of monitor lizards and mosasaurs would have been like. Tylosaurus also inhabited the Western Interior Seaway during the Late Cretaceous. Remains, amongst other places, have been discovered in Alabama and Kansas, amongst other places.
So that concludes our "Top Ten: Extinct Sea Monsters" edition! Unfortunate that we had to break it up into five parts, to be sure, but hey, that's life!
This post is part of the "Top Ten: Extinct Sea Monsters" series. For the rest of the posts in this series, click HERE.
9. Tanystropheus - Living during the Middle Triassic Period, Tanystropheus is somewhat of a misfit amongst this group, as he is not really a sea-monster, and was, at most, a semi-aquatic animal (think otters). Purportedly piscivorous, Tanystropheus fossils are usually found in semi-aquatic sites. Its neck has been likened to that of the Plesiosaurs, like Elasmosaurus. They would all use their necks to surprise a group of fish, long before the fish would be able to see the body of the reptile. Remains have been discovered throughout France, Germany, and Italy, amongst other places.
10. Tylosaurus - Interestingly enough, the closest living relative of the extinct mosasaurs, of which Tylosaurus is a member, are the monitor lizards, like the Komodo dragon. Both the monitor lizards and the mosasaurs have a third eye on the top of their heads, although it just looks like a little white dot on the top of the head of the monitor lizard. It doesn't work in the same fashion as their other eyes, however. Look towards a light (not the sun, because apparently that can actually be harmful) and close your eyes. You can still still some light, right? Now, move your hand back and forth in front of your face, between your eyes and the light. Can you see how the light changes? You can't see anything more distinct than the fact that something moved between you and that light. That is what the third eye of monitor lizards and mosasaurs would have been like. Tylosaurus also inhabited the Western Interior Seaway during the Late Cretaceous. Remains, amongst other places, have been discovered in Alabama and Kansas, amongst other places.
So that concludes our "Top Ten: Extinct Sea Monsters" edition! Unfortunate that we had to break it up into five parts, to be sure, but hey, that's life!
This post is part of the "Top Ten: Extinct Sea Monsters" series. For the rest of the posts in this series, click HERE.
Labels:
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Tanystropheus,
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Triassic,
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WIKS
Top Ten: Extinct Sea Monsters (Part 4 of 5)
7. Archelon - Archelon is the largest sea turtle that
has been discovered to date, the closest living relative that Archelon has
is the "Critically Endangered" leatherback sea turtle, the largest sea turtle
alive today. Living in the Late Cretaceous Western Interior Seaway
between 75-65 MYA, Archelon has been discovered in the states of South
Dakota, Wyoming and Kansas.
8. Leedsichthys - Often cited as the largest fish known to humankind, the largest Leedsichthys had an estimated length of 72 feet, but some researchers believe that it could have grown to sizes that would rival those seen in the blue whale, the largest known animal ever to live on planet Earth. Although Leedsichthys swam the seas only during the Jurassic Period, the group that it belonged to survived until the end of the Cretaceous Period. Remains of this filter feeder have been uncovered in England, France, Germany, and Chile.
COMING UP NEXT WE HAVE:
9. Tanystropheus
10. Tylosaurus
This post is part of the "Top Ten: Extinct Sea Monsters" series. For the rest of the posts in this series, click HERE.
8. Leedsichthys - Often cited as the largest fish known to humankind, the largest Leedsichthys had an estimated length of 72 feet, but some researchers believe that it could have grown to sizes that would rival those seen in the blue whale, the largest known animal ever to live on planet Earth. Although Leedsichthys swam the seas only during the Jurassic Period, the group that it belonged to survived until the end of the Cretaceous Period. Remains of this filter feeder have been uncovered in England, France, Germany, and Chile.
COMING UP NEXT WE HAVE:
9. Tanystropheus
10. Tylosaurus
This post is part of the "Top Ten: Extinct Sea Monsters" series. For the rest of the posts in this series, click HERE.
Labels:
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WIKS,
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Top Ten: Extinct Sea Monsters (Part 3 of 5)
5. Elasmosaurus - Next up on our trip across time is Elasmosaurus. One of the largest of the Plesiosaurs ever discovered, Elasmosaurus grew up to 46 feet long, which was about half neck. Equipped with a fairly small head, Elasmosaurus would have been incapable of going after large prey, so it would have mostly stuck with fish. Elasmosaurus lived during the Late Cretaceous, a time when much of North America was "Beneath the Waves," under something that we call the "Western Interior Seaway." Remains of this animal were first uncovered in Kansas, but it almost certainly swam all over the seaway, including in Colorado.
6. Dunkleosteus - Dunkleosteus, a creature we talked about a few weeks ago in our post about the Coelacanth, is another fascinating animal. Almost thirty-five feet in length, Dunkleosteus was a member of the Placoderms, a group of armored fish that were only around for about 50 MYA. A long time, to be sure, but not very long compared to the 400 million year reign of the sharks. While the Placoderms themselves lived during the Silurian and Devonian Periods, they went extinct during the transition to the Carboniferous Period, at the end of the Devonian. Dunkleosteus fossils have been discovered in North America, Poland, Belgium, and Morocco.
COMING UP:
7. Archelon
8. Leedsichthys
9. Tanystropheus
10. Tylosaurus
This post is part of the "Top Ten: Extinct Sea Monsters" series. For the rest of the posts in this series, click HERE.
6. Dunkleosteus - Dunkleosteus, a creature we talked about a few weeks ago in our post about the Coelacanth, is another fascinating animal. Almost thirty-five feet in length, Dunkleosteus was a member of the Placoderms, a group of armored fish that were only around for about 50 MYA. A long time, to be sure, but not very long compared to the 400 million year reign of the sharks. While the Placoderms themselves lived during the Silurian and Devonian Periods, they went extinct during the transition to the Carboniferous Period, at the end of the Devonian. Dunkleosteus fossils have been discovered in North America, Poland, Belgium, and Morocco.
COMING UP:
7. Archelon
8. Leedsichthys
9. Tanystropheus
10. Tylosaurus
This post is part of the "Top Ten: Extinct Sea Monsters" series. For the rest of the posts in this series, click HERE.
Labels:
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Wednesday, July 18, 2012
What Is It? The Weekly Challenge #2 Answer
Hello again! Thank you to our guessers for this week: surprisingly, one of you got it exactly right! Congratulations to Kristie C., who guessed this weeks mystery animal 100% correct! The correct animal was Pakicetus, an ancient ancestor of the cetaceans, or the whales, dolphins and porpoises. Around 53 MYA, Pakicetus lived in a world that was gradually becoming what we see today. At this time, what we now know as India was its own special island continent, moving steadily northwards until, eventually, India crashed into Asia. This crash resulted in the largest mountains we have today, the Himalayas.
However, 53 MYA, during the Eocene Epoch, India hadn't quite reached Asia, a small sea separating the two, the remains of the vast Tethys Ocean. The Tethys Sea was high in saline, which is incredibly good for life. Microscopic organisms like plankton flourished, sending reverberations up the food chain, all of the way to the fish, which exploded in numbers as well. And on the shore of this Tethys Sea, in what today is Pakistan, stood Pakicetus.
As Pakicetus watched the gread abundnace of fish in the waters, he began to take short fishing trips into the water. Over millennia, as Pakicetus took more and more fishing trips, of longer and longer duration, adaptations that proved beneficial for hunting fish in the water occurred, like a more streamlined shape, most likely webbed feet, and nostrils placed further back on the head. Over a few million years, Pakicetus evolved into another ancient whale, called Ambulocetus.
Check back in a few hours for your next "What Is It?" challenge? I promise you, after the last two, this one should seem like a piece of cake! See you all then!
However, 53 MYA, during the Eocene Epoch, India hadn't quite reached Asia, a small sea separating the two, the remains of the vast Tethys Ocean. The Tethys Sea was high in saline, which is incredibly good for life. Microscopic organisms like plankton flourished, sending reverberations up the food chain, all of the way to the fish, which exploded in numbers as well. And on the shore of this Tethys Sea, in what today is Pakistan, stood Pakicetus.
As Pakicetus watched the gread abundnace of fish in the waters, he began to take short fishing trips into the water. Over millennia, as Pakicetus took more and more fishing trips, of longer and longer duration, adaptations that proved beneficial for hunting fish in the water occurred, like a more streamlined shape, most likely webbed feet, and nostrils placed further back on the head. Over a few million years, Pakicetus evolved into another ancient whale, called Ambulocetus.
Check back in a few hours for your next "What Is It?" challenge? I promise you, after the last two, this one should seem like a piece of cake! See you all then!
Labels:
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Asia,
Cetaceans,
Dolphin,
Eocene,
Fish,
Himalayas,
India,
Kristie Chua,
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Pakicetus,
Pakistan,
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Porpoise,
Tethys Ocean,
Tethys Sea,
Webbed Feet,
Whale,
Whale Evolution,
What Is It?
Saturday, July 7, 2012
The Cichlids of the African Rift Lakes
Three of the largest lakes in the world reside in the 3,700 mile long Rift Valleys of Africa. These lakes, Lakes Victoria (located in the countries of Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania), Tanganyika (split between Burundi, the Democratic Republic of the Congo [DRC], Tanzania, and Zambia), and Malawi (located between Malawi, Mozambique and Tanzania), rank among the top ten largest lakes in the world; third, seventh, and ninth, respectively. (For some reason, these rankings differ upon where you look. Lake Victoria as the third largest lake seems pretty universal, but the ranks of Tanganyika and Malawi differ for whatever reason. You'd think that it would be pretty universal, but I suppose not.) Besides being such large lakes, these lakes are important for other reasons, perhaps the most important reason (for biologists, at least) being their isolation.
You see, the three great lakes are islands, of a sort. According to Websters, the definition of an island is "a land mass smaller than a continent and surrounded by water." The Rift Valley lakes are essentially the opposite; "a body of water smaller than an ocean and surrounded by land." For our purposes, an island is just something that has been isolated for a time, and allowed its flora and fauna to flourish in new and interesting ways.
And flourish it did in the Rift Valley lakes. If you were to visit these lakes, snorkel or scuba in their waters, you would most likely notice a wide variety of fish. You would not be wrong in this assessment; however, you might be surprised to find that most of these types of fish are belonging to a group called the cichlids (SICK-lids), and that all 1,650 plus species of these cichlids descended from a common ancestor. While the dates of when the common ancestor of the various cichlids came to be trapped in their respective lakes, it has been estimated that the cichlids of Lake Malawi all evolved from a common ancestor trapped 700,000 years ago, and those of Lake Victoria around 12,000 years ago. Trapped in these growing lakes while they were being formed, this small group of fish quickly came to dominate their new home, exploding in biodiversity to adapt to the wide variety of niches left open to them.
Tenuous can this biodiversity be, as recent logger-based erosion has shown. Logging nearby to one of the lakes resulted in rapid erosion. This erosion caused a great deal of silt to build up in one of the lakes. This, of course, caused the water to become quite murky; think about your average beach, and how murky the water often is near the shore. Many of the cichlids that lived in this area relied upon visual identification to recognize members of the same species for mating purposes. With the cloudy, muddled water, this became quite difficult. As a result, many fish from closely related species ended up mating with each other and, in the case of many of the couplings, resulted in viable offspring. These viable offspring in turn bred with other species, lowering, at least temporarily, the biodiversity of the cichlids in this particular corner of the lake.
Labels:
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Fish,
Kenya,
Lake Malawi,
Lake Tanganyika,
Lake Victoria,
Malawi,
Mozambique,
Record Breaker,
Rift Valley,
Tanzania,
Uganda,
Zambia
Wednesday, July 4, 2012
The Biggest Carnivorous Dinosaur Part 3: Spinosaurus, The World's Largest Penguin
Spinosaurus quickly smashed its way to the top (literally!) following the success of Jurassic Park III. At up to 56 feet (17 meters) in length, Spinosaurus (found in Egypt and Morocco) is unquestionably the longest carnivorous dinosaur that has ever been discovered, and by a significant margin, too. But how could Spinosaurus be so successful when another carnivorous monstrosity, Carcharodontosaurus, lived in such close proximity? The answer lies in what it ate; in fact, Spinosaurus appears not to have been as carnivorous as we once thought, and seems to in fact have been more piscivorous. Essentially, it is thought that Spinosaurus might have survived on a diet consisting a great deal upon fish.
There is a great wealth of information that indicates the staple diet of Spinosaurus was fish. Here we will take a more in-depth look at this evidence.
1. POSITION OF THE NOSTRILS: Spinosaurus, unlike most other theropod (meat-eating) dinosaurs had nostrils situated very high up on its skull. By contrast, most other theropods, like Tyrannosaurus, had nostrils very close to the front of the skull. The nostril placement in Spinosaurus would have allowed it to stick its nose into the water quite deep, enabling it to hunt fish more effectively.
2. SENSORY ORGANS ON THE TIP OF THE SNOUT: Along with the high placement of the nostrils, Spinosaurus also had a number of small sensory organs at the front of the snout, revealed by CT scans. These greatly resemble those of the crocodile, who uses them to sense where prey is by "seeing" tiny movements in the water. Thus, a crocodile can attack its prey without ever seeing them with their eyes. Spinosaurus appears to have been able to do much the same thing, making its hunting method of choice quite obviously effective, given its immense size.
3. ISOTOPIC EVIDENCE: A study of the isotopes in the skull of a Spinosaurus specimen revealed something quite interesting. Spinosaurus shares a great deal of isotopic overlap with crocodiles, fairly aquatic animals. By contrast, other carnivorous dinosaurs like Tyrannosaurus have very different isotopic readings, indicating a terrestrial lifestyle. Given the great deal of overlap possessed by Spinosaurus and crocodiles, it appears that Spinosaurus spent much of its life like a crocodile; semi-submerged in rivers and streams.
4. THE TEETH TELL THE TALE: Spinosaurus, unlike most other carnivorous dinosaurs like Tyrannosaurus, Allosaurus, or the famous Velociraptor, possess conical, round teeth. These other carnivores possess thin, blade-like teeth, made for slicing, crushing or tearing into other animals. Spinosaurus has teeth much like a crocodile; round and conical. These teeth are made for gripping and making sure that an animal does not escape.
5. THE TEETH TELL THE TALE....AGAIN: Yet again, we come to the issue of teeth, and this is one of the most damning pieces of evidence of all. During the time that Spinosaurus lived in North Africa, another inhabitant of these streams and rivers was a saw-toothed fish called Onchopristis. Two fossils involving Onchopristis have been discovered in conjunction with the remains of Spinosaurus. One was the skull of a Spinosaurus; imbedded in one of the tooth sockets was a vertebrae from an Onchopristis. The other discovery was the barb of an Onchopristis embedded in the jaw of the Spinosaurus.
6. PLUS: We only ever seem to find Spinosaurus in shallow aquatic environments, where fishy prey would be abundant.
All in all, it seems like an inevitable conclusion to draw that Spinosaurus was, in fact, a piscivore, at least much of the time. A fascinating example of the crazy turns evolution can take.
There is a great wealth of information that indicates the staple diet of Spinosaurus was fish. Here we will take a more in-depth look at this evidence.
![]() |
| A picture of Spinosaurus drawn by the talented young artist Sam Lippincott. |
2. SENSORY ORGANS ON THE TIP OF THE SNOUT: Along with the high placement of the nostrils, Spinosaurus also had a number of small sensory organs at the front of the snout, revealed by CT scans. These greatly resemble those of the crocodile, who uses them to sense where prey is by "seeing" tiny movements in the water. Thus, a crocodile can attack its prey without ever seeing them with their eyes. Spinosaurus appears to have been able to do much the same thing, making its hunting method of choice quite obviously effective, given its immense size.
3. ISOTOPIC EVIDENCE: A study of the isotopes in the skull of a Spinosaurus specimen revealed something quite interesting. Spinosaurus shares a great deal of isotopic overlap with crocodiles, fairly aquatic animals. By contrast, other carnivorous dinosaurs like Tyrannosaurus have very different isotopic readings, indicating a terrestrial lifestyle. Given the great deal of overlap possessed by Spinosaurus and crocodiles, it appears that Spinosaurus spent much of its life like a crocodile; semi-submerged in rivers and streams.
4. THE TEETH TELL THE TALE: Spinosaurus, unlike most other carnivorous dinosaurs like Tyrannosaurus, Allosaurus, or the famous Velociraptor, possess conical, round teeth. These other carnivores possess thin, blade-like teeth, made for slicing, crushing or tearing into other animals. Spinosaurus has teeth much like a crocodile; round and conical. These teeth are made for gripping and making sure that an animal does not escape.
5. THE TEETH TELL THE TALE....AGAIN: Yet again, we come to the issue of teeth, and this is one of the most damning pieces of evidence of all. During the time that Spinosaurus lived in North Africa, another inhabitant of these streams and rivers was a saw-toothed fish called Onchopristis. Two fossils involving Onchopristis have been discovered in conjunction with the remains of Spinosaurus. One was the skull of a Spinosaurus; imbedded in one of the tooth sockets was a vertebrae from an Onchopristis. The other discovery was the barb of an Onchopristis embedded in the jaw of the Spinosaurus.
6. PLUS: We only ever seem to find Spinosaurus in shallow aquatic environments, where fishy prey would be abundant.
All in all, it seems like an inevitable conclusion to draw that Spinosaurus was, in fact, a piscivore, at least much of the time. A fascinating example of the crazy turns evolution can take.
Labels:
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Alligator,
Carcharodontosaurus,
Crocodile,
Crocodilian,
Dinosaur,
Egypt,
Fish,
Jurassic Park,
Morocco,
Onchopristis,
Piscivore,
Record Breaker,
Sawfish,
Spinosaurus,
Teeth,
Tyrannosaurus,
Velociraptor
Saturday, June 30, 2012
Another Living Fossil: The Coelacanth
400 millions years ago (MYA), during the Devonian Period, life had already gained a foothold on land. However, in the seas, unless you were at the top of the food chain, there were a lot of predators to contend with. If you were a fish in the middle of the food chain during the Devonian, you not only had to deal with ancestors of the modern day shark, but a now-extinct group of armor-plated fish, called the Placoderms. Some of these Placoderms, like Dunkleosteus, grew to simply enormous proportions, around 30 feet in length! One type of fish that lived during the Devonian and was most likely preyed upon by the sharks and the Placoderms was a fish known as the Coelacanth.
The Coelacanth (SEE-lah-canth) was a relatively unassuming fish, its closest living relative being the lobe-finned fish. Fossils of the Coelacanth have been discovered ranging from 400 MYA to around 65 MYA, coinciding with the death of the dinosaurs. In 1938, however, when one was hauled in on a fishing net off the coast of South Africa, the temporal range of this animal was extended by 65 million years! Today, by studying the living Coelacanth, scientists have found that the fish gives birth to live young, unlike other fish. Further discoveries both in Africa (off the coasts of Mozambique, Madagascar, Kenya and Tanzania) as well as Asia, around Sulawesi, Indonesia, of living Coelacanth specimens have further widened the current geographical range of the Coelacanth.
Unfortunately for this living fossil, it is labeled "Critically Endangered" by the IUCN, much like yesterday's living fossil, the mountain pygmy possum. Just like the mountain pygmy possum, conservationist groups are working towards it's protection, trying to keep fisherman from fishing in the Coelacanth's habitat. Hopefully, humans won't be the final nail in the coffin, so to speak, for this 400 million year old fish.
The Coelacanth (SEE-lah-canth) was a relatively unassuming fish, its closest living relative being the lobe-finned fish. Fossils of the Coelacanth have been discovered ranging from 400 MYA to around 65 MYA, coinciding with the death of the dinosaurs. In 1938, however, when one was hauled in on a fishing net off the coast of South Africa, the temporal range of this animal was extended by 65 million years! Today, by studying the living Coelacanth, scientists have found that the fish gives birth to live young, unlike other fish. Further discoveries both in Africa (off the coasts of Mozambique, Madagascar, Kenya and Tanzania) as well as Asia, around Sulawesi, Indonesia, of living Coelacanth specimens have further widened the current geographical range of the Coelacanth.
| A specimen of the Cretaceous coelacanth Coccoderma nudum from Germany. On display at the Mace Brown Museum of Natural History on the campus of the College of Charleston in South Carolina. |
Labels:
Africa,
Asia,
Coccoderma,
Coelacanth,
Critically Endangered,
Devonian Period,
Dunkleosteus,
Fish,
Indonesia,
IUCN,
Kenya,
Living Fossil,
Madagascar,
Mountain Pygmy Possum,
Shark,
South Africa,
Sulawesi
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