InfotainmentAlien-like reproductive strategy found in 125-million-year-o...

Alien-like reproductive strategy found in 125-million-year-old fossil

Nature has imbued its mothers with many surprisingly strange ways to reproduce and care for their babies.
Some moms, like crocodiles and sharks, can skip the whole sex thing, using an adaptation that can be traced back to dinosaurs to clone themselves and deliver a ‘virgin birth.’
Scorpion mothers carry still-soft-shelled babes on their backs, reminding us that even arachnids can be adorable – never mind that a peckish mama might decide to devour a scorpling or two.
But exploring the evolutionary roots of these diverse maternal methods is tough, because reproductive tissues decay quickly after an animal’s death.
Now, an incredible discovery published in Scientific Reports offers some rare insight: an international research team has described a 125-million-year-old ‘pregnant’ shellfish with preserved soft tissues, including its itty-bitty babies.
Scientists have searched for a specimen like this for decades.
“This is the earliest known fossil evidence that these shellfish cared for and protected their developing young. Until now, this reproductive strategy was known only from living species,” says Martin Munt, a curator at the Dinosaur Isle Museum in the UK and a visiting researcher at the University of Portsmouth.
The ancient shellfish, a creature not generally imagined as motherly, is a bivalve. It belongs to a huge group of double-shelled mollusks, comprising more than 40,000 fossil and 50,000 extant species, including a who’s who of seafood-dish toppings, such as clams, oysters, scallops, and mussels.
The fossilized shellfish specimens were found on the Isle of Wight, an island off the southern coast of England and a site famous for its plentiful Cretaceous fossil finds, including what may have been one of Europe’s largest terrestrial terrors.
“Not only does this discovery provide a rare glimpse into how ancient freshwater shellfish reproduced,” Munt says, “but it also helps explain how these animals successfully adapted to life in rivers and lakes millions of years ago.”
The creatures studied herein, Margaritifera valdensis, are distantly related to today’s freshwater pearl mussels, which encompass up to 1,000 living species.
They also have one of the most unique reproductive strategies among all invertebrates, worthy of a xenomorph.
First, a basic birds-and-bees scenario occurs: Males release sperm into the water, which the females siphon and use to fertilize eggs inside a brood chamber that sits within a specialized portion of their gills.
In addition to shelter, the mother mollusks provide their growing young with calcium, a mineral that may have helped preserve these specimens.
The young then develop into larvae which, like parasites, must infect fish to mature. The larvae attach to gills and fins and grow under a fish’s skin, eventually dropping away to form new mussel beds.
This research also elucidates the origin of a dark, mysterious ‘molluskite’ material first described nearly 200 years ago.
(Yahoo News)

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