DNA remnants found in fossil of 6 million year old turtle
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[September 29, 2023]
(Reuters) - Remnants of DNA have been discovered in
fossilized remains dating to 6 million years ago of a sea turtle closely
related to today's Kemp's ridley and olive ridley turtles, marking one
of the rare times genetic material has been identified in such ancient
fossils of a vertebrate, researchers said on Thursday.
The researchers said some bone cells, called osteocytes, were
exquisitely preserved in the fossil, which was excavated along Panama's
Caribbean coast in 2015. The fossil is partial, with a relatively
complete carapace - the turtle's shell - but not the rest of the
skeleton. The turtle would have been about a foot (30 cm) long when
alive, they said.
In some of the osteocytes, the cell nuclei were preserved and reacted to
a chemical solution that allowed the researchers to recognize the
presence of remnants of DNA, the molecule that carries genetic
information for an organism's development and functioning, said
paleontologist Edwin Cadena, lead author of the study published in the
Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology.
"I want to point out that we did not extract DNA, we only were able to
recognize the presence of DNA traces in the nuclei," added Cadena, of
Universidad del Rosario in Bogota and the Smithsonian Tropical Research
Institute.
DNA is quite perishable, though in the right conditions it has been
preserved in some ancient remains. Researchers last year reported the
discovery of DNA from animals, plants and microbes dating to about 2
million years ago from sediment at Greenland's remote northernmost
point.
Cadena said the only older vertebrate fossils than the newly described
turtle to have been found with similar DNA remnants were of two
dinosaurs - Tyrannosaurus, which lived about 66 million years ago, and
Brachylophosaurus, which lived about 78 million years ago. Cadena said
DNA remnants also have been reported in insects dating to tens of
millions of years ago.
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A view shows a turtle fossil, in Bogota, Colombia, in this picture
taken on 2022. Edwin Cadena/via REUTERS
The turtle is from the same genus - Lepidochelys - as two of the
world's seven living species of sea turtles - the Kemp's ridley, the
world's smallest sea turtle, and the olive ridley, Cadena said.
Kemp's ridley, with a triangular-shaped head and a slightly hooked
beak, is primarily found in the Gulf of Mexico. The olive ridley,
which closely resembles the Kemp's ridley, has a larger
distribution, primarily found in the tropical regions of the
Pacific, Indian and Atlantic oceans.
The fossil represents the oldest-known member of Lepidochelys and
helps to shed light on the poorly understood evolutionary history of
this genus, the researchers said. They did not identify it by
species because the remains were too incomplete, Cadena said.
"Each fossil, each fossil site has specific conditions of
preservation that in some cases could have favored preservation of
original biomolecular remains such as proteins and DNA," Cadena
said.
"Maybe in the future and with more studies of this kind, we could be
able at some point to sequence very small pieces of DNA and to infer
things about their close relatives or involve that information in a
broader molecular evolutionary study," Cadena added.
(Reporting by Will Dunham in Washington; Additional reporting by
Elida Moreno; Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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