Ancient four-legged whale from Peru
walked on land, swam in sea
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[April 08, 2019]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Scientists have
unearthed fossils in a coastal desert of southern Peru of a four-legged
whale that thrived both in the sea and on land about 43 million years
ago in a discovery that illuminates a pivotal stage in early cetacean
evolution.
The 13-foot-long (4-meter) mammal, named Peregocetus pacificus,
represents a crucial intermediate step before whales became fully
adapted to a marine existence, the scientists said on Thursday.
Its four limbs were capable of bearing its weight on land, meaning
Peregocetus could return to the rocky coast to rest and perhaps give
birth while spending much of its time at sea. Its feet and hands had
small hooves and probably were webbed to aid in swimming. With long
fingers and toes, and relatively slender limbs, moving around on land
may not have been easy.
Its elongated snout and robust teeth - large grasping incisors and
canines along with flesh-shearing molars - made Peregocetus adept at
catching medium-size prey like fish.
"We think that it was feeding in the water, and that its underwater
locomotion was easier than that on land," said Royal Belgian Institute
of Natural Sciences paleontologist Olivier Lambert, who led the research
published in the journal Current Biology.
"Some vertebrae of the tail region share strong similarities with
semi-aquatic mammals like otters, indicating the tail was predominantly
used for underwater locomotion," Lambert added.
Whale evolutionary origins were poorly understood until the 1990s when
fossils of the earliest whales were found. Various fossils have shown
that whales evolved a bit more than 50 million years ago in Pakistan and
India from hoofed, land-dwelling mammals distantly related to hippos and
about the size of a medium-sized dog. It took millions of years for them
to spread around the world.
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The newly discovered early whale Peregocetus, which lived about 43
million years ago, is pictured along the rocky shore of the
southeastern Pacific in this undated artistic reconstruction
obtained by Reuters on April 3, 2019. Alberto Gennari/Handout via
REUTERS
Peregocetus represents the most complete quadrupedal whale skeleton
outside India and Pakistan, and the first known from the Pacific
region and the Southern Hemisphere.
Its presence in Peru, Lambert said, suggests quadrupedal whales
spread from South Asia to North Africa, then crossed the South
Atlantic to reach the New World. Peregocetus shows that the first
whales to reach the Americas still retained the ability to move on
land.
Over time, cetacean front limbs evolved into flippers. The hind
limbs eventually become mere vestiges. It was not until about 40
million years ago that the whale lineage evolved into completely
marine animals, then split into the two cetacean groups alive today:
filter-feeding baleen whales and toothed whales like dolphins and
orcas.
(Reporting by Will Dunham; Editing by Sandra Maler)
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