Whales
may be related to deer-like beast
By
SETH BORENSTEIN, AP Science Writer
WASHINGTON
- The gigantic ocean-dwelling whale may have evolved from a land animal the size
of a small raccoon, new research suggests. What might be the missing evolutionary
link between whales and land animals is an odd animal that looks like a long-tailed
deer without antlers or an overgrown long-legged rat, fossils indicate.
The
creature is called Indohyus, and recently unearthed fossils reveal some crucial
evolutionary similarities between it and water-dwelling cetaceans, such as whales,
dolphins and porpoises.
For
years, the hippo has been the leading candidate for the closest land relative
because of its similar DNA and whale-like features. So some scientists were skeptical
of the new hypothesis by an Ohio anatomy professor whose work was being published
Thursday in the journal Nature.
Still,
some researchers have been troubled that hippos seem to have lived in the wrong
part of the world and popped up too recently to be a whale ancestor.
Newer
fossils point to the deer-like Indohyus. The animal is a "missing link"
to the sister species to ancient whales, said Hans Thewissen, an anatomy professor
at Northeastern Ohio Universities College of Medicine.
"As
a zoo animal, it looks nothing like a whale," Thewissen said. But, he added,
when it comes to anatomical features, the Indohyus "is quite strikingly like
one."
Thewissen,
who earlier published papers on fossils of what he called the first amphibious
whale and the skeleton of the oldest known whale, studied hundreds of Indohyus
bones unearthed from mudstone in the Kashmir region of India. From that cache
of bones he created a composite skeleton of a 48 million-year-old creature.
The
key finding connecting Indohyus to the whale is its thickened ear bone, something
only seen in cetaceans. An examination of its teeth showed that the land-dwelling
creature spent lots of time in the water and may have fed there, like hippos and
whales. Also, the specific positioning and shape of certain molars connects Indohyus
to the earliest whales, which are about 50 million years old, Thewissen said.
"The
earliest whales didn't look like whales at all," Thewissen said. "It
looked like a cross between a pig and a dog." They lost their legs and ability
to walk on land about 40 million years ago, he said.
And
the Indohyus? "A tiny little deer maybe the size of a raccoon and no antlers,"
Thewissen said. He said it most resembles the current African mousedeer, which
has a rat-like nose and "when danger approaches, it jumps in the water and
hides."
India
and Pakistan were the general region where early whales lived. That matches with
the Indohyus but not the early African hippos, Thewissen said. While modern-day
cetaceans are known to be smart, early whales and Indohyus had small brains, the
researcher said.
Other
scientists were intrigued, but far from convinced, especially since the case for
hippos has looked good, they said.
"While
this new hypothesis for the origin of whales is compelling, it will require further
testing, especially since other recent studies have suggested both hippos and
Raoellids were involved in whale ancestry," San Diego State University biology
professor Annalisa Berta said in an e-mail. Raoellids are the larger grouping
of species that include the Indohyus.
Kenneth
Rose, a professor of functional anatomy and evolution at Johns Hopkins University,
said Thewissen didn't provide enough evidence to merit his conclusions. He also
questioned the use of the composite skeleton. The ear bone thickness, the key
trait that Thewissen used, was difficult to judge and seemed based on a single
specimen, Rose said. Much of the work is based on teeth, and overall the remains
preserved from this family of species are poorly preserved, he said.
Thewissen
said there are problems with not enough well preserved fossils, but he said what's
left makes a strong case for Indohyus as the closest land ancestor with
hippos as the closest living land relative.