WASHINGTON, Oct. 8 (Xinhua) -- An international team
of paleontologists has discovered a new species of mammal that lived 123 million
years ago in what is now the Liaoning Province in northeastern China. The newly
discovered animal, Maotherium asiaticus, comes from famous fossil-rich beds of
the Yixian Formation. This new remarkably well preserved fossil, as reported in
the October 9 issue of the journal Science, offers an important insight into how
the mammalian middle ear evolved.
The discoveries of such exquisite dinosaur-age
mammals from China provide developmental biologists and paleontologists with
evidence of how developmental mechanisms have impacted the morphological
(body-structure) evolution of the earliest mammals and sheds light on how
complex structures can arise in evolution because of changes in developmental
pathways.
"What is most surprising, and thus scientifically
interesting, is this animal's ear," says Dr. Zhe-Xi Luo, curator of vertebrate
paleontology and associate director of science and research at Carnegie Museum
of Natural History. "Mammals have highly sensitive hearing, far better than the
hearing capacity of all other vertebrates, and hearing is fundamental to the
mammalian way of life. The mammalian ear evolution is important for
understanding the origins of key mammalian adaptations."
Thanks to their intricate middle ear structure,
mammals (including humans) have more sensitive hearing, discerning a wider range
of sounds than other vertebrates. This sensitive hearing wasa crucial
adaptation, allowing mammals to be active in the darkness of the night and to
survive in the dinosaur-dominated Mesozoic.
Mammalian hearing adaptation is made possible by a
sophisticated middle ear of three tiny bones, known as the hammer (malleus), the
anvil (incus), and the stirrup (stapes), plus a bony ring for the eardrum
(tympanic membrane). These mammal middle ear bones evolved from the bones of the
jaw hinge in their reptilian relatives. Paleontologists have long attempted to
understand the evolutionary pathway via which these precursor jawbones became
separated from the jaw and moved into the middle ear of modern mammals.
To evolutionary biologists, an understanding of how
the sophisticated and highly sensitive mammalian ear evolved may illuminate how
a new and complex structure transforms through evolution. According to the
Chinese and American scientists who studied this new mammal, the middle ear
bones of Maotherium are partly similar to those of modern mammals; but
Maotherium's middleear has an unusual connection to the lower jaw that is unlike
that of adult modern mammals. This middle ear connection, also known as the
ossified Meckel's cartilage, resembles the embryonic condition of living mammals
and the primitive middle ear of pre-mammalian ancestors.
Because Maotherium asiaticus is preserved
three-dimensionally, paleontologists were able to reconstruct how the middle ear
attached to the jaw. This can be a new evolutionary feature. Or, it can be
interpreted as having a "secondarily reversal to the ancestral condition,"
meaning that the adaptation is the caused by changes in development.
Modern developmental biology has shown that
developmental genes and their gene network can trigger the development of
unusual middle ear structures, such as "reappearance" of the Meckel's cartilage
in modern mice. The middle ear morphology in fossil mammal Maotherium of the
Cretaceous (145-65 million years ago) is very similar to the mutant morphology
in the middle ear of the mice with mutant genes. The scientific team studying
the fossil suggests that the unusual middle ear structure, such as the ossified
Meckel's cartilage, is actually the manifestation of developmental gene
mutations in the deep times of Mesozoic mammal evolution.
Maotherium asiaticus is a symmetrodont, meaning that
it has teeth with symmetrically arranged cusps specialized for feeding oninsects
and worms. It lived on the ground and had a body 15 cm long and weighing
approximately 70 to 80 grams. By studying all features in this exquisitely
preserved fossil, researchers believe Maotherium to be more closely related to
marsupials and placentalsthan to monotremes -- primitive egg-laying mammals of
Australia and New Guinea such as the platypus.