Creature named for Kermit the Frog offers clues on amphibian evolution
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[March 22, 2024]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - There definitely were no muppets during the
Permian Period, but there was a Kermit - or at least a forerunner of
modern amphibians that has been named after the celebrity frog.
Scientists on Thursday described the fossilized skull of a creature
called Kermitops gratus that lived in what is now Texas about 270
million years ago. It belongs to a lineage believed to have given rise
to the three living branches of amphibians - frogs, salamanders and
limbless caecilians.
While only the skull - measuring around 1.2 inches (3 cm) long - was
discovered, the researchers think Kermitops had a stoutly built
salamander-like body roughly 6-7 inches (15-18 cm) long, though
salamanders would not evolve for another roughly 100 million years.
Amphibians are one of the four groups of living terrestrial vertebrates,
along with reptiles, birds and mammals. The unique features of the
Kermitops skull - a blend of archaic and more advanced features - are
providing insight into amphibian evolution.
"Kermitops helps us understand the early history of amphibians by
revealing there isn't a clear trend of step by step becoming more like
the modern amphibian," said Calvin So, a George Washington University
paleontology doctoral student and lead author of the study published in
the Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society.
The fossil was collected in 1984 near Lake Kemp in Texas and kept in the
expansive collection of the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of
Natural History in Washington, but was not thoroughly studied until
recently.
Kermitops had a rounded snout, not unlike frogs and salamanders.
Preserved in its eye sockets were palpebral bones - or eyelid bones - a
feature absent in today's amphibians. Its skull is constructed of
roof-like bones, in contrast to the thin and strut-like bones of modern
amphibians.
"The length of the skull in front of the eyes is longer than the length
of the skull behind the eyes, which differs from the other fossil
amphibians living at the same time. We think this might have allowed
Kermitops to snap its jaws closed faster, enabling capture of fast
insect prey," So said.
The fossil record of early amphibians and their forerunners is spotty,
making it difficult to figure out the origins of modern amphibians.
"Kermitops, with its unique anatomy, really exemplifies the importance
of continuing to add new fossil data to understanding this evolutionary
problem," said National Museum of Natural History paleontologist and
study co-author Arjan Mann.
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A composite image shows the fossil skull of the Permian Period
proto-amphibian Kermitops (L) alongside a modern frog skull (Lithobates
palustris), in this undated handout. Brittany M. Hance,
Smithsonian/Handout via REUTERS
Kermit the Frog was created by the late American puppeteer Jim
Henson in 1955, and a Kermit puppet made in the 1970s is in the
collection of the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History
as an important cultural object.
Kermitops means "Kermit face," a nod to the muppet's humorous look.
"We thought that the eyelid bones gave the fossil a bug-eyed look,
and combined with a lopsided smile produced by slight crushing
during the preservation of the fossil, we really thought it looked
like Kermit the Frog," So said.
Kermitops belonged to a group called temnospondyls that arose a few
tens of millions of years after the first land vertebrates evolved
from fish ancestors. The biggest temnospondyls superficially
resembled crocodiles, including two that each were around 20 feet (6
meters) in length, Prionosuchus and Mastodonsaurus.
Temnospondyls are considered the progenitor lineage of modern
amphibians, Mann said.
Kermitops existed about 20 million years before the worst mass
extinction in Earth's history and about 40 million years before the
first dinosaurs. It lived alongside other members of the amphibian
lineage as well as the impressive sail-backed Dimetrodon, a predator
related to the mammalian lineage.
The environment in which Kermitops lived appears to have alternated
between warm and humid seasons and hot and arid seasons.
"This environment would be similar to modern-day monsoons that take
place in the Southwest U.S. and Southeast Asia," So said.
(Reporting by Will Dunham, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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