Paris
– It may not have been love as we know it, but around 385 million years
ago, our very distant ancestors — armoured fish called placoderms — developed
the art of intercourse.
So
suggest a team of evolutionary scientists, who point to the fossil of a
placoderm species blessed with the name of Microbrachius dicki.
Measuring
about eight centimetres (four inches) in length, M. dicki lived in habitats in
modern-day Scotland — where the first specimen was found in 1888 — and in
Estonia and China.
Placoderms
have previously been found to be the most primitive jawed animal — the earliest
known vertebrate forerunner of humans.
But
they now have an even more honoured place in the book of life.
Microbrachius
is the first known species to copulate in order to carry out internal
fertilisation, according to a paper published on Sunday in the journal Nature.
Male
fish had bony, L-shaped genital limbs called claspers which transferred sperm
into the female, a more effective way of reproduction compared to spawning in
the water, the study says.
The
females, for their part, developed small, paired bones with which they locked
the male organs in place in order to copulate.
“‘Microbrachius’
means little arms, but scientists have been baffled for centuries by what these
bony paired arms were actually there for,” said John Long, a professor of
palaeontology at Flinders University in Adelaide, Australia.
“We’ve
solved this great mystery because they were there for mating, so that the male
could position his claspers into the female genital area.”
Until
now, it was thought internal fertilisation occurred much later in the
evolutionary tale of vertebrates.
Covered
with thick, bony plates covering the head and trunk, placoderms ruled the
world’s oceans, rivers and lakes for around 70 million years.
They
were then were wiped out around 360 million years ago in a mysterious mass
extinction.
For
decades, they were deemed by many palaeontologists to be a curiosity — an
evolutionary branch that failed.
But
work by Long and others found them to be far more important.
The
critters handed on features such as jaws, teeth and paired limbs that are seen
today in reptiles, birds and mammals, including humans.
If the
new study is right, the “claspers,” over hundreds of millions of years, evolved
into the penis.
Microbrachius’
copulatory skill was uncovered last year when Long stumbled across a fossil in a
collection at the University of Technology in Tallinn, Estonia.
Males
and females probably had sex side by side, with their bony jointed genitals
locked together, according to the new investigation.
“This
enabled the males to manoeuvre their genital organs into the right position for
mating,” Long said.
The
position looked, well, rather weird, he admitted.
“With
their arms interlocked, these fish looked more like they are square-dancing the
do-se-do rather than mating.”.
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