World’s Oldest Flying Squirrel Fossil Discovered
MessageToEagle.com – Scientists have discovered the fossil of the world’s oldest flying squirrel fossil and the intriguing finding gives new insight on the origin and evolution of these airborne animals. The 11.6-million-year-old fossil was discovered in Can Mata landfill, Spain.
“Due to the large size of the tail and thigh bones, we initially thought the remains belonged to a primate,” Isaac Casanovas-Vilar, researcher at the Institut Català de Paleontologia Miquel Crusafont (ICP) in Barcelona said.
Artistic reconstruction of the extinct flying squirrel Miopetaurista neogrivensis. Credit: Oscar Sanisidro
In fact, and much to the disappointment of paleoprimatologists, further excavation revealed that it was a large rodent skeleton with minuscule specialized wrist bones, identifying it as Miopetaurista neogrivensis – an extinct flying squirrel.
Combining molecular and paleontological data to carry out evolutionary analyses of the fossil, Casanovas-Vilar and the team demonstrated that flying squirrels evolved from tree squirrels as far back as 31 to 25 million years ago, and possibly even earlier.
In addition, their results showed that Miopetaurista is closely related to an existing group of giant flying squirrels called Petaurista. Their skeletons are in fact so similar that the large species that currently inhabits the tropical and subtropical forests of Asia could be considered living fossils.
With 52 species scattered across the northern hemisphere, flying squirrels are the most successful group of mammals that adopted the ability to glide. To drift between trees in distances of up to 150 meters, these small animals pack their own ‘parachute’: a membrane draping between their lower limbs and the long cartilage rods that extend from their wrists. Their tiny, specialized wrist bones, which are unique to flying squirrels, help support the cartilaginous extensions.
See also:
Megachirella: Mother Of All Lizards – World’s Oldest Fossil Found
Fossil Of Giant And One Of The Oldest Penguins Found In New Zealand
But the origin of these animals is highly debated. While most genetic studies point towards the group splitting from tree squirrels about 23 million years ago, some 36-million-year-old remains that could belong to flying squirrels have previously been found.
“The problem is that these ancient remains are mainly teeth,” Casanovas-Vilar explains. “As the dental features used to distinguish between gliding and non-gliding squirrels may actually be shared by the two groups, it is difficult to attribute the ancient teeth undoubtedly to a flying squirrel. In our study, we estimate that the split took place around 31 and 25 million years ago, earlier than previously thought, suggesting the oldest fossils may not belong to flying squirrels.
“Molecular and paleontological data are often at odds, but this fossil shows that they can be reconciled and combined to retrace history,” he adds. “Discovering even older fossils could help to retrace how flying squirrels diverged from the rest of their evolutionary tree.”
MessageToEagle.com
Expand for referencesRelated Posts
-
‘Extremely Rare Event’: Bone Analysis Suggests Ancient Echidnas Lived In Water
No Comments | May 6, 2025 -
Kingdom Of Mitanni: Forgotten For Millennia But Once Great Power Of Ancient West Asia In 2000 BC
No Comments | Jul 8, 2023 -
Tarantula’s Blues And Greens May Be Used To Communicate, Attract Or Conceal
No Comments | Sep 25, 2020 -
Why Are False Beliefs Stronger Than Hard Evidence?
No Comments | Sep 13, 2018 -
Super-Earths And Their Magnetic Fields Generated By Magma Oceans
No Comments | Nov 27, 2018 -
Incredible Giant Shoebill Stork Looks Like A Real Dinosaur
No Comments | Sep 29, 2018 -
Our Universe Is A Gigantic And Wonderfully Detailed Holographic Illusion
No Comments | Aug 5, 2015 -
Discovery Of New Ice May Change Understanding Of Water
No Comments | Feb 5, 2023 -
Earliest Sea Scorpion From China Found In End-Ordovician Anji Biota In Zhejiang
No Comments | May 17, 2023 -
Greater Social Distancing Could Curb The Coronavirus In 13 Weeks – Scientists Say
No Comments | Mar 25, 2020

