Tully canavarı (Tullimonstrum gregarium) olağandışı anatomisi ve belirsiz sınıflandırması nedeniyle 50 yılı aşkın bir süredir paleontologları şaşırttı. Şimdi, Japonya’daki bir ekip gizemli fosili incelemek için 3 boyutlu görüntüleme teknolojisini kullandı ve bazı araştırmacıların daha önce varsaydığı gibi bunun bir omurgalı olmadığı sonucuna vardı. Omurgasızların kesin taksonomisi ve türü henüz belirlenmemiş olsa da, bu yeni araştırma erken dönem omurgalıların evrimi hakkında değerli bilgiler sağlıyor. Tully canavarı, 1950’lerde, iyi korunmuş, yumuşak gövdeli deniz fosillerine sahip ender bir bölge olan Illinois’deki Mazon Creek Lagerstätte’de keşfedildi. Kredi bilgileri: Nobuo Tamura/Wikimedia
Gizemli fosilin 3 boyutlu taranması, sonunda onun bir omurgalı mı yoksa omurgasız mı olarak sınıflandırıldığına ilişkin tartışmayı çözmüş olabilir.
Tully canavarı (Tullimonstrum gregarium), sınıflandırmalarını zorlaştıran alışılmadık anatomileri nedeniyle 50 yılı aşkın bir süredir paleontologlar için bir gizem kaynağı olmuştur. Bir araştırma ekibi tarafından yakın zamanda yapılan bir araştırma, Tullimonstrum’un siklostomlara (bufa balığı ve hagfish gibi çenesiz balıklar) benzer bir omurgalı olduğu teorisini ortaya koydu.
Doğruluğu kanıtlanırsa, bu hipotez erken geliştirmede eksik halkayı dolduracaktır.[{” attribute=””>vertebrates. However, the research conducted so far has produced conflicting results, with some supporting the idea and others rejecting it.
Now, using 3D imaging technology, a team in Japan believes it has found the answer after uncovering detailed characteristics of the Tully monster which strongly suggest that it was not a vertebrate. However, its exact classification and what type of invertebrate it was is still to be decided.
In the 1950s, Francis Tully was enjoying his hobby fossil hunting in a site known as Mazon Creek Lagerstätte in the U.S. state of Illinois, when he discovered what would later become known as the Tully monster.
Discovered in the 1950s and first described in a paper in 1966, the Tully monster, with its stalked eyes and long proboscis, is difficult to compare to all other known animal groups. Unique to Illinois in the U.S., it became its state fossil in 1989. Credit: Takahiro Sakono, 2022
This 15-centimeter (on average), 300-million-year-old marine “monster” turned out to be an enigma, as ever since its discovery researchers have debated where it fits in the classification of living things (its taxonomic position). Unlike dinosaur bones and hard-shelled creatures that are often found as fossils, the Tully monster was soft-bodied.
The Mazon Creek Lagerstätte is one of the few places in the world where the conditions were just right for imprints of these marine animals to be captured in detail in the underwater mud before they could decay. In 2016, a group of scientists in the US proposed a hypothesis that the Tully monster was a vertebrate. If this was the case, then it could be a missing piece of the puzzle on how vertebrates evolved.
Despite considerable effort, studies both supporting and rejecting this hypothesis have been published in recent years, and so a consensus had not been reached. However, new research by a team from the University of Tokyo and Nagoya University may have finally brought an end to the debate.
Often used to study dinosaur footprints, these color-coded depth maps enabled the researchers to thoroughly investigate the structure of the Tully monster and other fossils from Mazon Creek. Credit: Mikami, 2022
“We believe that the mystery of it being an invertebrate or vertebrate has been solved,” said Tomoyuki Mikami, a doctoral student in the Graduate School of Science at the University of Tokyo at the time of the study and currently a researcher at the National Museum of Nature and Science. “Based on multiple lines of evidence, the vertebrate hypothesis of the Tully monster is untenable. The most important point is that the Tully monster had segmentation in its head region that extended from its body. This characteristic is not known in any vertebrate lineage, suggesting a nonvertebrate affinity.”
The team studied more than 150 fossilized Tully monsters and over 70 other varied animal fossils from Mazon Creek. With the aid of a 3D laser scanner, they created color-coded, three-dimensional maps of the fossils which showed the tiny irregularities which existed on their surface through color variation.
X-ray micro-computed tomography (which uses X-rays to create cross-sections of an object so that a 3D model can be created), was also used to look at its proboscis (an elongated organ located in the head). This 3D data showed that features previously used to identify the Tully monster as a vertebrate were not actually consistent with those of vertebrates.
Although the researchers are confident from this study that the Tully monster was not a vertebrate, the next step of the investigation will be to answer what group of organisms it does belong to, possibly a nonvertebrate chordate (like a fishlike animal known as a lancelet) or some sort of protostome (a diverse group of animals containing, for example, insects, roundworms, earthworms, and snails) with radically modified morphology.
Problematic fossils like the Tully monster highlight the challenge of piecing together the dynamic history of Earth and the diverse organisms that have inhabited it.
“There were many interesting animals that were never preserved as fossils,” Mikami said. “In this sense, research on the fossils from Mazon Creek is important because it provides paleontological evidence that cannot be obtained from other sites. More and more research is needed to extract important clues from Mazon Creek fossils to understand the evolutionary history of life.”
Reference: “Three-dimensional anatomy of the Tully monster casts doubt on its presumed vertebrate affinities” by Tomoyuki Mikami, Takafumi Ikeda, Yusuke Muramiya, Tatsuya Hirasawa and Wataru Iwasaki, 16 April 2023, Palaeontology.
DOI: 10.1111/pala.12646
The study was funded by the Masason Foundation, the Fujiwara Natural History Foundation, JSPS KAKENHI, and the World-Leading Innovative Graduate Study Program for Life Science and Technology.
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