homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Almost a spider: Scientists find 300-million year old pre-spider

Scientists have identified a 1.5 cm creature that predates the dinosaurs by 100 million years. While not exactly a spider, the tiny beast is the closest relative to spiders, but its lineage is extinct. Spiders are basically ubiquitous. They can be found on every continent except for Antarctica and in every environment ever – except […]

Mihai Andrei
March 31, 2016 @ 9:10 am

share Share

Scientists have identified a 1.5 cm creature that predates the dinosaurs by 100 million years. While not exactly a spider, the tiny beast is the closest relative to spiders, but its lineage is extinct.

Digital visualization of Idmonarachne brasieri. Garwood et al 2016/MNHN, Paris

Spiders are basically ubiquitous. They can be found on every continent except for Antarctica and in every environment ever – except in the air and under water. But for the big and diverse group that they are, we still don’t know many things about them, as researchers write in the study:

“Spiders are an important animal group, with a long history. Details of their origins remain limited, with little knowledge of their stem group, and no insights into the sequence of character acquisition during spider evolution.”

Now, they found a new specimen which might shed some light on their early evolution. Well, the specimen was found long ago in France, but it was just now properly analyzed, with CT scans, a technique that is used more and more on fossils and mummiesIdmonarachne brasieri, the arachnid, was among “a box full of fossils” that Dr Garwood’s co-author Paul Selden, from the University of Kansas in the US, had borrowed from the Museum National d’Histoire Naturelle in Paris in the 1980s. As it so often happens to fossils, it was simply forgotten and ignored for years and years.

“By CT scanning it, you can actually extract the full front half of the animal from the rock, to try and better understand its anatomy,” Dr Garwood said in an interview.

The animal looks like a spider. It has eight spidery limbs, and some imposing jaws, but they lack a distinct spidery characteristic:

“Although distinctly spider-like in habitus, this remarkable fossil lacks a key diagnostic character of Araneae: spinnerets on the underside of the opisthosoma.” In English, this means they can’t produce silk.

Reconstruction of the spider-like creature. Garwood et al, 2016.

Spinerets are silk-spinning organs commonly located on the underside of a spider’s abdomen, to the rear. That’s what the study is trying to say, albeit in biological jargon. Spiders have two, four, six or eight spinerets, and this fossil has none. This means that this creature split from the evolutionary branch of the spiders (or spiders broke from it), but the two are closely related.

“Our creature probably split off the spider line after [Attercopus], but before true spiders appeared,” Garwood said. “The earliest known spider is actually from the same fossil deposit – and it definitely has spinnerets. So what we’re actually looking at is an extinct lineage that split off the spider line some time before 305 million years ago, and those two have evolved in parallel.”

He also checked if this was just an accident and the fossil dropped the spinerets after or during fossilization, but this wasn’t the case.

“We had to consider the fact they could have fallen out, and just left a hole in the abdomen,” Dr Garwood said. “You need a quite high-resolution scan to be able to spot that distortion.”

They christened the creature after a colleague: Martin Brasier, an Oxford palaeobiologist who passed recently in a car accident.

 

share Share

This 5,500-year-old Kish tablet is the oldest written document

Beer, goats, and grains: here's what the oldest document reveals.

A Huge, Lazy Black Hole Is Redefining the Early Universe

Astronomers using the James Webb Space Telescope have discovered a massive, dormant black hole from just 800 million years after the Big Bang.

Did Columbus Bring Syphilis to Europe? Ancient DNA Suggests So

A new study pinpoints the origin of the STD to South America.

The Magnetic North Pole Has Shifted Again. Here’s Why It Matters

The magnetic North pole is now closer to Siberia than it is to Canada, and scientists aren't sure why.

For better or worse, machine learning is shaping biology research

Machine learning tools can increase the pace of biology research and open the door to new research questions, but the benefits don’t come without risks.

This Babylonian Student's 4,000-Year-Old Math Blunder Is Still Relatable Today

More than memorializing a math mistake, stone tablets show just how advanced the Babylonians were in their time.

Sixty Years Ago, We Nearly Wiped Out Bed Bugs. Then, They Started Changing

Driven to the brink of extinction, bed bugs adapted—and now pesticides are almost useless against them.

LG’s $60,000 Transparent TV Is So Luxe It’s Practically Invisible

This TV screen vanishes at the push of a button.

Couple Finds Giant Teeth in Backyard Belonging to 13,000-year-old Mastodon

A New York couple stumble upon an ancient mastodon fossil beneath their lawn.

Worms and Dogs Thrive in Chernobyl’s Radioactive Zone — and Scientists are Intrigued

In the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone, worms show no genetic damage despite living in highly radioactive soil, and free-ranging dogs persist despite contamination.