Thursday, February 13, 2014

Major Transformations - Jaw Evolution




I like my jaws.  They are, perhaps, my favorite thing to use when I am chewing stuff.  They are also incredibly helpful in the whole talking department, and given that I am a teacher this is a fairly important adaptation for me to have.  Jaws are really swell.

But how did we come to have these neat little chompers anyway?  It turns out that the story of jaw evolution is fairly simple.  You see, once upon a time about 530 million years ago, there lived a group of critters named the Agnathans.  These were a strange sort of organism what with their long bodies and sucker faces and no paired fins, but they were some of the first fish to grace our fair ocean and for this we have to give them credit. 

They were a happy sort of fish (I assume) and lived their lives happily filtering their breakfasts, lunches, and dinners through their happy little sucker mouths.  The water would flow in through their open face hole and then out again through the gills.  This provided them with both food and oxygen which are good things to have if you want to not die.  And not die they did.  Or didn't.  Or didn't not do.  Or whichever combination of words means that they survived for quite a long time and can, in fact, be found alive today.  The relatively gross Lampreys and the downright vile Hagfish are both examples of Agnathan (jawless) fish.

Those little gills that they used to pull oxygen from the water are all feathery and frilly and, if taken out of the water, will collapse in a little less than frilly pile.  To combat this, these jawless fish used special cartilage bars called Gill Arches to give the gills a bit of backing.  These gill arches served the purpose remarkably and kept those little frilly gills open and extracting oxygen, but the relative stiffness of these gill arches could also be viewed as a bad thing.  Since they couldn't flex too much the fish had to rely on continuous movement or the occasional currents to keep water flowing over their gills.  

This constant motion was a major energy drain and could have been a bit of a problem for these early critters.  No matter how streamlined you are, constant movement is going to require more energy than simply hanging out.  If you will allow me a bit of gross oversimplification, after a bit of time a mutation or series of mutations in the genes that regulate the formation of these gill arches came about and, quite literally, changed the world.  The gill arches became hinged so that they could be a bit more flexy.  This added flexibility gave those critters with these mutations an advantage over their less flexy peers.  They could now pump their gill arches like a bellows and bring flowing water over the gills without having to move around much.

So now we have flexible gill arches.  You might be asking, What does this have to do with my ability to eat a cow?  Actually, it has everything to do with your ability to eat a cow, or celery, or anything else for that matter.  You see, it was these flexible gill arches that eventually became the jaws.

In another gross oversimplification, over time the front gill arches became more flexible and pushed forward a bit.  The flexible gill arches in the front linked up with the mouth and gave the fish a tool for trapping food.  Now the fish could flex the rear arches to bring water into the mouth and over the gills, and it could flex the front gill arches to snap completely shut to catch other critters for food.  The jaw was now basically complete - an apparatus for taking oxygen out of the water was turned into a weapon.

For a more complicated version of these events complete with fancy science words and a lot more detail, go here

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