Friday, December 26, 2025
ADVT 
National

Canadian study on walking fish sheds light on evolution of limbs

Bob Weber, Canadian Press, 27 Aug, 2014 10:23 AM
  • Canadian study on walking fish sheds light on evolution of limbs
Science marches on. Sometimes, it does so on fins.
 
Scientists at the University of Ottawa have studied the effect of a lifetime of walking on a certain type of fish. Yes, fish.
 
The results, say their paper in the journal Nature, suggest much about the evolution of complex pieces of anatomy such as arms and legs.
 
"What we wanted to pin down was: if you change the environment of this fish, does it change its behaviour or does its anatomy change?" said Emily Standen of the University of Ottawa.
 
Her team started with a fish called Polypterus. They have both lungs and gills and can live in water or on land. They also have lobelike fins, positioned so they can pull themselves awkwardly forward as if with stunted arms.
 
"Some people might say they're not as pretty as trout, but I think they're amazing," Standen said.
 
She and her colleagues took two groups of Polypterus, raising one in water and one on land. They found that by the end of the experiment, the land-raised group had indeed become more efficient walkers than their marine counterparts.
 
But more interestingly, the landlubbers' bodies had also changed. Bones that hooked to walking muscles had grown beefier. And just a subtle hint of what might be glancingly referred to as a neck had also emerged.
 
Even more interestingly, the changes seen in the walking group looked a lot like the changes seen in the fossil record as fish slowly evolved for terrestrial life.
 
"All of these changes mirror what we see in the fossil record," said Standen. "You see these changes in the bones suddenly over evolutionary time, mirrored by what's going on in this one individual."
 
Environmental changes had produced physical changes — a key finding regarding what scientists call plasticity, the "wiggle room" allowed for in every organism's DNA.
 
"What it's telling us is the plasticity, or the variation that's hidden within all of us, relates to the evolutionary process because what it allows animals to do is exist in novel environments," Standen said.
 
"When you change an environment and (an organism) responds in this plastic way, adaptive selection and evolution has something upon which to act."
 
The whole issue of plasticity is a hot one for evolutionary biologists, Standen said. The amount of its influence over evolution or how traits that appear in individuals become "fixed" into an entire species is still mysterious.
 
But it could help explain why evolution can come up with solutions so quickly.
 
"If you've got this variation within you, you don't have to wait for random advantageous mutation to occur to allow you to do something new," Standen said.
 
"You can use your plasticity to do that new thing, evolution can then act on that existing building block, and that combination allows you to explain how really complex changes can occur in a really short time."
 
Standen said she hopes to be able to keep using Polypterus to answer those questions.
 
"It is dream to be able to breed these, to be able to take it to the next step and do generation after generation and see how far does this go and how fast does this go. Can you get this to fix, somehow?
 
"It is fascinating."
 
Photo Courtesy- The Telegraph

MORE National ARTICLES

Experts, not politicians, to decide who gets donated Ebola vaccine: Canada

Experts, not politicians, to decide who gets donated Ebola vaccine: Canada
TORONTO - Canadian Heritage Minister Shelly Glover says politics has no place in the decisions on how best to use the 800 to 1,000 doses Canada has promised to donate.

Experts, not politicians, to decide who gets donated Ebola vaccine: Canada

Tekmira in talks about using experimental Ebola drug in infected patients

Tekmira in talks about using experimental Ebola drug in infected patients
VANCOUVER - Tekmira Pharmaceuticals Corp. (TSX:TKM) is in discussions about making its experimental Ebola drug available to infected patients, but says there is no guarantee the treatment can be used to help quell the outbreak in West Africa.

Tekmira in talks about using experimental Ebola drug in infected patients

Vancouver police officer used too much force during traffic stop: watchdog

Vancouver police officer used too much force during traffic stop: watchdog
A Vancouver police officer used excessive and unnecessary force when he punched a driver three times during a traffic stop in 2012, said a ruling by B.C.'s police watchdog.

Vancouver police officer used too much force during traffic stop: watchdog

Fleet of six new Bitcoin ATMs arrive in shopping centres across Toronto

Fleet of six new Bitcoin ATMs arrive in shopping centres across Toronto
A Calgary company is looking to boost the profile of the world's newest, and most controversial, currency with the launch of six more teller machines in Toronto that deal in the virtual currency Bitcoin.

Fleet of six new Bitcoin ATMs arrive in shopping centres across Toronto

White House talking to Canada, others about aiding Iraqi refugees

White House talking to Canada, others about aiding Iraqi refugees
The United States is considering a multinational mission to whisk displaced people to safety in Iraq and it appears there may be a supporting role for Canada.

White House talking to Canada, others about aiding Iraqi refugees

B.C. special prosecutor approves polygamy charges against 4 people in Bountiful

B.C. special prosecutor approves polygamy charges against 4 people in Bountiful
A special prosecutor has approved polygamy charges against the two leaders of an isolated religious sect in southeastern British Columbia.

B.C. special prosecutor approves polygamy charges against 4 people in Bountiful