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Attenborough, read your mail: Evolution is messier than TV

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Remember Tiktaalik (“Early tetrapod (“fishapod”) sheds light on transition to land—maybe ”), where post-hoopla, it turned out that other creatures’ tracks on land were found from 20 million years earlier?

The point was made that

The Polish trackways establish that Tiktaalik wasn’t anywhere near the first tetrapod, so the most important information about the transition to land doesn’t even include Tiktaalik at present. We need to find the creatures that made those tracks.

Some fish today routinely spend time out of the water, using a variety of mechanisms. But there is no particular reason to believe that they are on their way to becoming full time tetrapods or land dwellers. So we would need to be cautious about assuming that specific mechanisms that might be useful on land are definitive evidence of a definite, permanent move to full-time land dwelling.

A friend writes to point out a modern-day examples that illustrates this, the walking shark:

Walking shark

If this fish were found as a 500 mya fossil, it would be hailed as a transitional, but it is actually just occupying a niche from which it has no apparent intention of giving notice.

Of course there were transitionals, but the problem is, there are so many niches along the way that it’s going to take far more information than we have now to identify them with anything like the certainty that the popular science media affixes to any given find.

The Attenborough version simply assumes that Tiktaalik (tic-TALL-ik) is “the first” of a long line of something special.

Really? Maybe Tiktaalik was the last instance of a failed lineage. Maybe it was the duck-billed platypus of its time, a survivor but unique. Maybe it was doing something unusual, and that how it got fossilized when other life forms didn’t. This Atten-free version is messier and leaves us with lots more questions, but it is more like histories we are personally familiar with: messy and leaves us with lots more questions.

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Comments
You guys are thinking in chains, not the trees that evolution makes. A fossil like tiiktalik allows to reconstruct the characters in the common ancestor of fishapods and extant tetrapods. Becuase that ancestor is considerably older than the common ancestor shared by all mdoern tetrapods, and also younger than the common ancestor shared by tetarpods and lobed-finned fishes tiiktalik helps us reconstruct the transistion to land - whetehr or not Tiiktalik istelf is an ancestor of modern tetrapods.wd400
February 7, 2014
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Every once in a while one stumbles upon a terrifying level of wishful thinking among Darwin supporters:
WD400: (..) a species doesn’t have to have descendants to be transitional.
Box
February 7, 2014
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Reminds me of this absolute bosker :) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HaQug8l702APeterJ
February 7, 2014
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But a species doesn’t have to have descendants to be transitional.
Wait, what? If there aren't any descendants, what it is "transitional" to? If you mean it was transitional to something that never was due to the species' not surviving, that's simply speculation.TSErik
February 7, 2014
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If it doesn't have descendents then it isn't a transional. In that case it just "looks like" a transitional.Joe
February 7, 2014
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If this fish were found as a 500 mya fossil, it would be hailed as a transitional, Transitional to what? That hyperdiverse clade of land sharks? More to the point, it's quite liekly Tiktaalik has no descendants, which is precisely how most fish-a-pod trees are drawn. But a species doesn't have to have descendants to be transitional. It certainly isn't a "unique survivor" (nor are platypuses really, they're highly derrived).wd400
February 7, 2014
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