keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37973214/henri-de-lacaze-duthiers-and-the-ascidian-hypothesis
#41
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Catherine Jessus, Vincent Laudet
In 1830, Cuvier and Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire confronted each other in a famous debate on the unity of the animal kingdom, which permeated the zoology of the 19th century. From that time, a growing number of naturalists attempted to understand the large-scale relationships among animals. And among all the questions, that of the origin of vertebrates was one of the most controversial. Analytical methods based on comparative anatomy, embryology and paleontology were developed to identify convincing homologies that would reveal a logical sequence of events for the evolution of an invertebrate into the first vertebrate...
November 16, 2023: Journal of Experimental Zoology. Part B, Molecular and Developmental Evolution
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37933101/from-beasts-to-bytes-revolutionizing-zoological-research-with-artificial-intelligence
#42
REVIEW
Yu-Juan Zhang, Zeyu Luo, Yawen Sun, Junhao Liu, Zongqing Chen
Since the late 2010s, Artificial Intelligence (AI) including machine learning, boosted through deep learning, has boomed as a vital tool to leverage computer vision, natural language processing and speech recognition in revolutionizing zoological research. This review provides an overview of the primary tasks, core models, datasets, and applications of AI in zoological research, including animal classification, resource conservation, behavior, development, genetics and evolution, breeding and health, disease models, and paleontology...
November 18, 2023: Zoological Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37931097/soft-robotics-informs-how-an-early-echinoderm-moved
#43
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Richard Desatnik, Zach J Patterson, Przemysław Gorzelak, Samuel Zamora, Philip LeDuc, Carmel Majidi
The transition from sessile suspension to active mobile detritus feeding in early echinoderms (c.a. 500 Mya) required sophisticated locomotion strategies. However, understanding locomotion adopted by extinct animals in the absence of trace fossils and modern analogues is extremely challenging. Here, we develop a biomimetic soft robot testbed with accompanying computational simulation to understand fundamental principles of locomotion in one of the most enigmatic mobile groups of early stalked echinoderms-pleurocystitids...
November 14, 2023: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37859727/fitting-and-evaluating-univariate-and-multivariate-models-of-within-lineage-evolution
#44
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kjetil Lysne Voje
The nature of phenotypic evolution within lineages is central to many unresolved questions in paleontology and evolutionary biology. Analyses of evolutionary time-series of ancestor-descendant populations in the fossil record are likely to make important contributions to many of these debates. However, the limited number of models that have been applied to these types of data may restrict our ability to interpret phenotypic evolution in the fossil record. Using uni- and multivariate models of trait evolution that make different assumptions regarding the dynamics of the adaptive landscape, I evaluate contrasting hypotheses to explain evolution of size in the radiolarian Eucyrtidium calvertense and armor in the stickleback Gaserosteus doryssus ...
November 2023: Paleobiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37858341/a-50-million-year-old-three-dimensionally-preserved-bat-skull-supports-an-early-origin-for-modern-echolocation
#45
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Suzanne J Hand, Jacob Maugoust, Robin M D Beck, Maeva J Orliac
Bats are among the most recognizable, numerous, and widespread of all mammals. But much of their fossil record is missing, and bat origins remain poorly understood, as do the relationships of early to modern bats. Here, we describe a new early Eocene bat that helps bridge the gap between archaic stem bats and the hyperdiverse modern bat radiation of more than 1,460 living species. Recovered from ∼50 million-year-old cave sediments in the Quercy Phosphorites of southwestern France, Vielasia sigei's remains include a near-complete, three-dimensionally preserved skull-the oldest uncrushed bat cranium yet found...
October 17, 2023: Current Biology: CB
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37849067/taphonomy-of-harpy-eagle-predation-on-primates-and-other-mammals
#46
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Guilherme S T Garbino, Thiago B F Semedo, Everton B P Miranda
The goal of this study is to provide a taphonomic analysis of bone fragments found in harpy eagle nests in the Brazilian Amazonia, utilizing the largest sample of prey remains collected to date. Harpy eagle kill samples were collected from nine nests, between June 2016 and December 2020 in Mato Grosso, Brazil. We identified the specimens, calculated the number of identified specimens (NISP) and minimum number of individuals (MNI). These metrics were used to estimate bone survivability and fragmentation. A total of 1661 specimens (NISP) were collected, representing a minimum number of 234 individuals (MNI)...
October 17, 2023: American Journal of Primatology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37840715/microbially-mediated-fossil-concretions-and-their-characterization-by-the-latest-methodologies-a-review
#47
REVIEW
Navdeep K Dhami, Paul F Greenwood, Stephen F Poropat, Madison Tripp, Amy Elson, Hridya Vijay, Luke Brosnan, Alex I Holman, Matthew Campbell, Peter Hopper, Lisa Smith, Andrew Jian, Kliti Grice
The study of well-preserved organic matter (OM) within mineral concretions has provided key insights into depositional and environmental conditions in deep time. Concretions of varied compositions, including carbonate, phosphate, and iron-based minerals, have been found to host exceptionally preserved fossils. Organic geochemical characterization of concretion-encapsulated OM promises valuable new information of fossil preservation, paleoenvironments, and even direct taxonomic information to further illuminate the evolutionary dynamics of our planet and its biota...
2023: Frontiers in Microbiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37836192/challenges-and-opportunities-behind-the-use-of-herbaria-in-paleogenomics-studies
#48
REVIEW
Simone Papalini, Valerio Di Vittori, Alice Pieri, Marina Allegrezza, Giulia Frascarelli, Laura Nanni, Elena Bitocchi, Elisa Bellucci, Tania Gioia, Luis Guasch Pereira, Karolina Susek, Maud Tenaillon, Kerstin Neumann, Roberto Papa
Paleogenomics focuses on the recovery, manipulation, and analysis of ancient DNA (aDNA) from historical or long-dead organisms to reconstruct and analyze their genomes. The aDNA is commonly obtained from remains found in paleontological and archaeological sites, conserved in museums, and in other archival collections. Herbarium collections represent a great source of phenotypic and genotypic information, and their exploitation has allowed for inference and clarification of previously unsolved taxonomic and systematic relationships...
September 30, 2023: Plants (Basel, Switzerland)
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37822889/fungal-spores-in-caribbean-mangrove-sediments-dataset-from-southeastern-mexico
#49
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Cynthia Karina Can-Canales, Gerald A Islebe, Alicia Carrillo-Bastos, Nuria Torrescano-Valle, Alejandro Antonio Aragón-Moreno
Most paleoecological investigations use different biotic or abiotic proxies for climate and environmental reconstructions. Although fossil pollen is one of the most used biological proxies, Non-Pollen Palynomorphs (NPPs), especially fungal spores and tissues, have an underestimated potential to infer local and regional climate dynamics. This dataset describes the most common Non-pollen palynomorphs of fungal origin from mangrove sediments in the Caribbean Sea, southeastern Mexico. A detailed descriptive Atlas is presented, with light micrographs taken from routine pollen slides in paleoecological reconstructions...
December 2023: Data in Brief
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37818113/science-battles-viral-diseases-a-roundtable-discussion-with-leading-experts-on-covid-19-hepatitis-and-aids
#50
JOURNAL ARTICLE
He Zhu
The Science Popularization and Education Committee of the Academic Divisions of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CASAD) invited the CAS Institutes of Science and Development (CASISD) and National Science Review (NSR) to organize a roundtable discussion of viral infectious diseases on 11 October 2022. During this extensive discussion, experts introduced the history and background of virus and viral infectious diseases. They explained the function of human's immune system. In addition, they answered frequently asked questions by the public such as the efficacy and safety of COVID vaccines, the cost of disease treatment and the threat of latest monkey pox outbreak...
November 2023: National Science Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37803496/distinctive-microfossil-supports-early-paleoproterozoic-rise-in-complex-cellular-organisation
#51
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Erica V Barlow, Christopher H House, Ming-Chang Liu, Maxwell T Wetherington, Martin J Van Kranendonk
The great oxidation event (GOE), ~2.4 billion years ago, caused fundamental changes to the chemistry of Earth's surface environments. However, the effect of these changes on the biosphere is unknown, due to a worldwide lack of well-preserved fossils from this time. Here, we investigate exceptionally preserved, large spherical aggregate (SA) microfossils permineralised in chert from the c. 2.4 Ga Turee Creek Group in Western Australia. Field and petrographic observations, Raman spectroscopic mapping, and in situ carbon isotopic analyses uncover insights into the morphology, habitat, reproduction and metabolism of this unusual form, whose distinctive, SA morphology has no known counterpart in the fossil record...
October 6, 2023: Geobiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37790996/pampean-megamammals-in-europe-the-fossil-collections-from-santiago-roth
#52
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Damián Voglino, Jorge D Carrillo-Briceño, Heinz Furrer, Ana Balcarcel, Gizeh Rangel-de Lazaro, Gabriel Aguirre Fernández, Analía M Forasiepi
UNLABELLED: Santiago Roth was a Swiss fossil finder, naturalist, and paleontologist that emigrated to Argentina in 1866. His work largely influenced the discipline in the country at the end of the twentieth century, particularly the stratigraphy of the Pampean region. Some of his collections of Pampean fossils were sold to museums and private collectors in Europe and were accompanied by elaborated catalogues. Fossils in the Roth's catalogues N° 2 and 3 are housed today in the Natural History Museum of Denmark, fossils from catalogues N° 4 to 6, were sold to Swiss museums, with Catalogue N° 5 currently housed at the Department of Paleontology, Universität Zürich...
2023: Swiss journal of palaeontology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37780015/molecular-evidence-of-structural-changes-in-silk-using-unlimited-degradation-mass-spectrometry
#53
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jie Zhou, Xiong Zhou, Lindan Pan, Yefeng Deng, Hailing Zheng, Zhiqin Peng, Junmin Wan, Yang Zhou, Bing Wang
Proteomics has important uses in archeological science because it can distinguish species, reveal the evolution of paleontology, and provide biological evidence of historical events. However, this technique still has full potential in the study of silk aging mechanisms. In this work, we propose a strategy combining unlimited degradation with mass-spectrometry-based proteomics techniques, which interpret protein fragmentation propensity and secondary structure changes by detecting content changes of specific peptide groups in complex proteomes...
September 26, 2023: ACS Omega
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37748079/changes-in-parrot-diversity-after-human-arrival-to-the-caribbean
#54
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jessica A Oswald, Brian Tilston Smith, Julie M Allen, Robert P Guralnick, David W Steadman, Michelle J LeFebvre
Humans did not arrive on most of the world's islands until relatively recently, making islands favorable places for disentangling the timing and magnitude of natural and anthropogenic impacts on species diversity and distributions. Here, we focus on Amazona parrots in the Caribbean, which have close relationships with humans (e.g., as pets as well as sources of meat and colorful feathers). Caribbean parrots also have substantial fossil and archaeological records that span the Holocene. We leverage this exemplary record to showcase how combining ancient and modern DNA, along with radiometric dating, can shed light on diversification and extinction dynamics and answer long-standing questions about the magnitude of human impacts in the region...
October 10, 2023: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37738291/scaphopoda-is-the-sister-taxon-to-bivalvia-evidence-of-ancient-incomplete-lineage-sorting
#55
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Hao Song, Yunan Wang, Haojing Shao, Zhuoqing Li, Pinli Hu, Meghan K Yap-Chiongco, Pu Shi, Tao Zhang, Cui Li, Yiguan Wang, Peizhen Ma, Jakob Vinther, Haiyan Wang, Kevin M Kocot
The almost simultaneous emergence of major animal phyla during the early Cambrian shaped modern animal biodiversity. Reconstructing evolutionary relationships among such closely spaced branches in the animal tree of life has proven to be a major challenge, hindering understanding of early animal evolution and the fossil record. This is particularly true in the species-rich and highly varied Mollusca where dramatic inconsistency among paleontological, morphological, and molecular evidence has led to a long-standing debate about the group's phylogeny and the nature of dozens of enigmatic fossil taxa...
October 3, 2023: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37724627/the-role-of-clay-minerals-in-the-preservation-of-precambrian-organic-walled-microfossils
#56
JOURNAL ARTICLE
C R Woltz, R P Anderson, N J Tosca, S M Porter
Precambrian organic-walled microfossils (OWMs) are primarily preserved in mudstones and shales that are low in total organic carbon (TOC). Recent work suggests that high TOC may hinder OWM preservation, perhaps because it interferes with chemical interactions involving certain clay minerals that inhibit the decay of microorganisms. To test if clay mineralogy controls OWM preservation, and if TOC moderates the effect of clay minerals, we compared OWM preservational quality (measured by pitting on fossil surfaces and the deterioration of wall margins) to TOC, total clay, and specific clay mineral concentrations in 78 shale samples from 11 lithologic units ranging in age from ca...
September 19, 2023: Geobiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37721083/paramagnetic-characterization-of-fossil-mollusc-shells-at-eastern-part-of-the-old-konya-lake-its-importance-for-epr-dating
#57
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gamze Ekici, Ulku Sayin, Mesut Isik, Sevinc Kapan, Ahmet Demir, Hulya Aydin Karaaslan, Arif Delikan, Recep Biyik, Hukmu Orhan, Birol Engin, Recep Tapramaz, Ayhan Ozmen
Fossil mollusc shells are used for dating geological materials because they are well preserved throughout geological time. In this study, the radicals in the structure of fossil mollusc shells (Dreissena iconica, Valvata piscinalis, Bithynia tentaculate, Unio pictorum) collected from the Eastern Part of Old Konya Lake in Türkiye were investigated by EPR technique. For all fossil shells, microwave and temperature dependence of the signals were examined, and the signals suitable for dating are discussed...
September 18, 2023: Radiation Protection Dosimetry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37717103/organic-walled-microfossils-in-wet-peperites-from-the-early-cretaceous-paran%C3%A3-etendeka-volcanism-of-brazil
#58
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lucas Del Mouro, Bruno Becker-Kerber, Valdecir A Janasi, Marcelo de Araújo Carvalho, Breno L Waichel, Evandro F Lima, Lucas M M Rossetti, Vinicius Cruz, Mateus Souza Silva, Natália Famelli, Javier Ortega-Hernández
Large igneous provinces (LIPs) are major magmatic events that have a significant impact on the global environment and the biosphere, for example as triggers of mass extinctions. LIPs provide an excellent sedimentological and geochemical record of short but intense periods of geological activity in the past, but their contribution towards understanding ancient life is much more restricted due to the destructive nature of their igneous origin. Here, we provide the first paleontological evidence for organic walled microfossils extracted from wet peperites from the Early Cretaceous Paraná-Etendeka intertrappean deposits of the Paraná basin in Brazil...
September 16, 2023: Scientific Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37713454/frameworks-for-interpreting-the-early-fossil-record-of-eukaryotes
#59
REVIEW
Susannah M Porter, Leigh Anne Riedman
The origin of modern eukaryotes is one of the key transitions in life's history, and also one of the least understood. Although the fossil record provides the most direct view of this process, interpreting the fossils of early eukaryotes and eukaryote-grade organisms is not straightforward. We present two end-member models for the evolution of modern (i.e., crown) eukaryotes-one in which modern eukaryotes evolved early, and another in which they evolved late-and interpret key fossils within these frameworks, including where they might fit in eukaryote phylogeny and what they may tell us about the evolution of eukaryotic cell biology and ecology...
September 15, 2023: Annual Review of Microbiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37706073/from-fossil-trader-to-paleontologist-on-swiss-born-naturalist-santiago-roth-and-his-scientific-contributions
#60
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Marcelo R Sánchez-Villagra, Mariano Bond, Marcelo Reguero, Tomás Bartoletti
UNLABELLED: Roth's explorations, the resulting collections many now allocated in La Plata, Zurich, Geneva and Copenhagen, and his significant contributions in geological-especially stratigraphic-and paleontological topics, are a paradigmatic case for the global history of paleontology and for the Swiss migration history in Latin America. His work included the discovery of a diverse megafauna from the Pampean region, of sites and strata in Patagonia of paleontological significance, and the recognition of a group of endemic ungulate mammals, Notoungulata...
2023: Swiss journal of palaeontology
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