Showing posts with label Scorpions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Scorpions. Show all posts

Thursday, September 5, 2013

Scorpion Is Gondwana's Oldest Land Animal


LiveScience.com
Scorpion Is Gondwana's Oldest Land Animal
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A 360-million-year-old fossilized scorpion stinger is evidence of the oldest land animal from the supercontinent …
A fierce predator with a huge stinger and long pincers is the oldest land-animal fossil ever found on the former Gondwana supercontinent, a new study reports.
The 360-million-year-old scorpion was discovered in a spectacular fossil deposit in South Africa at Waterloo Farm, near Grahamstown. Until now, the only evidence of ancient creepy crawlies on land came from Laurasia, the giant land mass north of Gondwana.
The fossil confirms that invertebrate animals, such as scorpions, colonized both Gondwana and Laurasia during the Devonian period. At the time, the two supercontinents were separated by the Tethys Ocean. Researchers had spotted the same trees and plants, as well as similar fish, on both supercontinents, but scorpions and other land-living animals were confined to Laurasia.
The discovery also extends the range of ancient land animals. Parts of Gondwana crossed the South Pole in the Late Devonian (Earth's climate was warmer than it is now), while most of Laurasia rested in the warmer tropics. The shallow sea where the scorpion bits were buried and preserved in black mud sat at 80 degrees South latitude. [Have There Always Been Continents?]
"What we're seeing is the Late Devonian ecosystem was not just along the tropical belt, but also extending to the high latitudes. [This] is quite important, because this is actually the environment in which early tetrapods are thought to have emerged around the latest Devonian," said Robert Gess, a paleontologist at Wits University in South Africa, who discovered the scorpion fossil.
Tetrapods were the first vertebrates to walk on land. Scorpions, millipedes and other insects were their likely food source, Gess said. "The conditions for when these creatures first emerged were global," he told LiveScience. "That's quite a big piece of evidence."
Only two parts of the newly discovered scorpion — a pincer and a tail — were recovered from the black shale at Waterloo Farm. The entire insect was probably 4 to 6 inches (10 to 15 centimeters) long, Gess said. The black shale formed from layers of shallow sea mud, but the fossil diversity and preservation are similar to those found in Canada's famous Burgess Shale, a deep-sea environment that offers a window into Early Cambrian life, Gess said. The Cambrian period, which lasted from 543 million to 490 million years ago, marks the dramatic evolutionary expansion of life.
"We haven't even finished the excavations, but once we're done, this will be one of the milestone sites of the Late Devonian," Gess said.
Waterloo Farm was discovered during highway construction in 1985. The site has also yielded fossilized fish, plants and the world's oldest lamprey, a jawless fish with a circular, toothy mouth.
Gess believes more Gondwana land animals are waiting to be discovered, both at Waterloo Farm and in the scattered supercontinent remnants — Africa, South America, India, Madagascar and South America.
"There's a long history of paleontology in Europe and North America, whereas in places like Africa and South America, it hasn't been as big as a field," Gess said. "I think we will be finding a lot of the missing stuff [in the future]," he said.
The findings were published Aug. 28 in the journal African Invertebrates.
Email Becky Oskin or follow her @beckyoskin. Follow us @livescience, Facebook & Google+. Original article on LiveScience.

Wednesday, January 2, 2013

Scorpions



Scorpions

  Scorpions are members of the class Arachnida along spiders, harvestmen, ticks, and mites. They are one of the oldest if not the oldest living animal on Earth. Their fossils go back 430 million years to the Silurian period. Early in Earth’s natural history scorpions and closely related animals live in the oceans. They breathe using gills instead of book lungs scorpions used today.

 

  Most scorpions live in the warmer parts of the world. However scorpions can be found in every continent except Antarctica. Scorpions live in just about any habitat from deserts to forests to high altitude mountains. Any place they can dig a burrow. They find cover from other bigger predators during the day in underground burrows or holes. Scorpions become active at night. They use many very sensitive hairs to sense their environment and hunt for their prey. Scorpions are opportunistic predators normally eat insects and other small invertebrates. They use their pinchers to catch their prey. Then use the stinger at the end of their narrow segmented tail curved over their back to inject fast acting neurotoxin venom. This paralyzes or kills their victim before they eat it. It is also used for defense against other bigger predators. Like spiders scorpion can only eat food in liquid form so their food is digested externally. All scorpions can deliver painful stings to humans but only 25 species have venom powerful enough to kill an adult.