25 May, 2013
News Channel – Mind Processors
times-of-indiabbc-news
cnet-newsyahoo-newsApple-newsgoogle-newsmsnbc-newscnn-newsfox-news
Skip to content
  • Home
  • Technology
    • Gadgets
    • Hardware
    • Software
    • Innovations
    • Linux
    • Open Source
    • Science
    • Telecom
    • Wireless
  • Business Tech
    • Eco-Bizz
    • Global Leaders
      • Apple
      • Google
      • Intel
      • Microsoft
      • Yahoo
    • Research
    • Politics & Law
  • Mind Processors
  • Gaming
    • News & Features
    • Playstation
    • X-Box
    • PC
    • Reviews
  • Security
  • Web
    • Social Media
  • Video
  • More
  • Subscribe
Follow @mindprocessors
Web Hosting Mindprocessors

Earliest placental mammal ancestor pinpointed

Posted on February 8, 2013 by Source: www.bbc.com
Tweet

The creature that gave rise to all the placental mammals – a huge group that includes whales, elephants, dogs, bats and us – has at last been pinpointed.

Earliest placental mammal ancestor pinpointed

An international effort mapped out thousands of physical traits and genetic clues to trace the lineage.

Their results indicate that all placental mammals arose from a small, furry, insect-eating animal.

A report in Science resolves the debate as to when the creature lived; it came about after the demise of dinosaurs.

That had been a hotly debated question over years of research.

Placental mammals – as opposed to the kind that lay eggs, such as the platypus, or carry young in pouches, such as the kangaroo – are an extraordinarily diverse group of animals with more than 5,000 species today. They include examples that fly, swim and run, and range in weight from a couple of grams to hundreds of tonnes.

A wealth of fossil evidence had pointed to the notion that the group, or clade, grew in an “explosion” of species shortly after the dinosaurs’ end about 65 million years ago.

But a range of genetic studies that look for fairly regular changes in genetic makeup suggested that the group arose as long as 100 million years ago, with mammals such as early rodents sharing the Earth with the dinosaurs.

‘Tree of Life’
Deciphering the very distant past on the basis of fossils and animals that are around today is inherently a subjective business.

“Comparative anatomy” – in which, for example, the forelimbs of a number of fossils are compared to establish which are most closely related – was the entire toolbox for the earliest palaeontologists. The era of genetics ushered in a more incisive tool to compare similarities across species.

But the new work tackles the question of placental mammals in unprecedented detail, developing a database of physical and genetic data some 10 times larger than any used previously – and taking a decidedly modern take on it.

“Anatomy and research in palaeontology had a very 19th Century veneer to it – that we would sit in small groups in a lab with a fossil describing it,” said lead author of the study Maureen O’Leary of Stony Brook University in New York, US.

“That is a very effective and important part of what we do, but by trying to bring this into the 21st Century and using new software, we were able to really band together as a group of experts and tackle a much larger problem,” she told BBC News.

To build the database, the team gathered more than 4,500 details of phenotype – diet, lengths of limbs, shapes of teeth, length of fur if any, and so on – from 86 different species that are around today, and from 40 fossils of extinct animals.

To that they added some 12,000 detailed images and genetic information for all of the current species, putting all the data into what Dr O’Leary called “a supermatrix – essentially like a spreadsheet, filled with observations and images, to create a really rich description of mammals we’d sampled”.

That, in essence, allows not just one or a few researchers to log details and make comparisons of, for example, fossil or genetic data; it becomes a problem shared – in this case, among 23 co-authors.

“That really wasn’t possible until we developed this software called Morphobank. Our experts in China or Brazil or Canada or the US or just across the hall could all be working in one place at the same time,” Dr O’Leary said.

By noting which traits have been preserved down the lineage and how they are expressed, the team was able to feed their phenotypic and genetic data into standard software that makes relationship and age estimates – suggesting the ancestral animal lived just 200,000 years after the extinction event that saw the end of the dinosaurs.

It also yields informed guesses as to the traits of the ancestral animal that gave rise to them all – incorporating those traits into an artist’s conception of what it would have looked like.

The result resolves a long-standing debate, but Dr O’Leary said it could also contribute to a new way of tackling such debates.

“I think that it will go a long way toward showing people a way forward for using all the data… both DNA and anatomy. I think that had been an intimidating kind of project because of its scale,” Dr O’Leary said.

“Now that we can do that…we are sort of iteratively working and refining the ‘Tree of Life’ in that way.”

Related Post

  • Elephant can speak Korean
  • Posted in Science and tagged ancestor, dog, elephant, kangaroo, mammal.Bookmark this post.

    Comments are closed.

    CompUSA
    • Recent Posts

      • Planck satellite: Esa to release maps of ancient light
      • Nvidia unveils virtual graphics server in push beyond PCs
      • Google Maps climbs world’s tallest mountains
      • Congress hears options for asteroid defense: Pay now or pray later
      • New Lizard Species Look Like Evil Dinosaur Hybrids
    • Subscribe News


    • Recent Comments

      • Kirk on Groupon launches credit card payment business to compete with Paypal
      • Green Bay Packers on Steve Jobs better career role model than Obama: Survey
      • MBT Women Shoes on HR checking candidates’ background on FB, Twitter, Google
      • sexleksaker on Facebook suspends photo tag tool in Europe
      • cbn grinding wheels on Aquarium releases 655-pound sea turtle off Cape Cod after treatment
    • Archives

      • March 2013
      • February 2013
      • January 2013
      • December 2012
      • November 2012
      • October 2012
      • September 2012
      • August 2012
      • July 2012
      • June 2012
      • May 2012
      • April 2012
      • March 2012
      • February 2012
      • January 2012
      • December 2011
      • November 2011
      • October 2011
      • September 2011
      • August 2011
    • Tags

      Amazon American Android Anonymous Apple AT&T BlackBerry California China computer Earth email Europe Facebook Gmail Google+ India Internet iOS iPad iPhone Japan London Mark Zuckerberg Microsoft Microsoft' mobile NASA New York Samsung smartphone smartphones social network Software Sony space Steve Jobs tablet tablets Twitter U.S. Windows Windows 8 Yahoo YouTube
    Latest News:-
    • Planck satellite: Esa to release maps of ancient light
    • Nvidia unveils virtual graphics server in push beyond PCs
    • Google Maps climbs world’s tallest mountains
    • Congress hears options for asteroid defense: Pay now or pray later
    • New Lizard Species Look Like Evil Dinosaur Hybrids
    • Curiosity breaks rock to reveal dazzling white interior

    Categories

    • - Business Tech
    • - Security
    • - Technology
    • - Gadgets
    • - Gaming
    • - Global Leaders
    • - Web

    Official Connections

    • - TheQueries.com
    • - Blog.MindProcessors.com
    • - Forum.MindProcessors.com
    • - Blog.AbhilashShukla.info
    • - MindProcessors.com
    • - Web.MindProcessors.com

    Disclaimer

    • Our news channel is intended to provide quality news from top online news providing companies. This channel is a collection of quality and best news at one place. The news and the logos of other providers are completely their own property.

    Where else we are

    • - Connect with us on FaceBook
    • - Follow us on Twitter
    • - Subscribe to our Youtube Channel
    • - Connect via LinkedIn
    • - Find us on Google+
    © 2011 Mind Processors Technologies, All rights reserved.
    • About us
    • Contact Us
    • Careers
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    • Sitemap