448 CHAPTER 17
fin to limb. Hoping to fill in more of this evolutionary sequence, Neil Shubin and
colleagues explored promising Devonian deposits in northern Canada and found
just what they sought: a rich fossil deposit of a new “tetrapodomorph” which they
named Tiktaalik roseae [23a, 85]. Like ichthyostegids, Tiktaalik had a flat, mobile
head and elongate snout and lacked gill cover bones; it also had overlapping ribs,
which would have provided the support that the body of a partly terrestrial ani-
mal requires (FIGURE 17.16B). Most important, the pectoral (shoulder) girdle and
fins of Tiktaalik are intermediate between those of the sarcopterygian and tetrapod
conditions. The forelimb and wrist bones are clearly homologous to those of early
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Evolution4e_17.16.ai Date 12-31-2016
(B)
(A)
WRIST
(C)
ELBOW
Ulnare
Intermedium
Radius
Humerus
Ulna
Eusthenopteron (osteolepiform)
Panderichthys
Tiktaalik (“tetrapodomorph”)
Acanthostega (tetrapod)
Ichthyostega (tetrapod)
Stem
sarcopterygian
Time
FIGURE 17.16 The lineage from stem sarcopterygian fishes to early tetra-
pods, such as Ichthyostega, shows the vertebrate transition to life on land.
The recently discovered intermediate Tiktaalik and the tetrapods have
a flatter skull than the fish Eusthenopteron, but its structure (as seen from
above, at left) is very similar, except that the gill cover bones at the rear have
been lost. Among the drawings of forelimbs at far left, note the intermediate
structure of the forelimb of Tiktaalik. (B) An articulated skeleton of Tiktaalik.
(C) Drawing of the pectoral fin, or forelimb, of Tiktaalik, showing positions of
joints and the homologues of the limb bones of tetrapods. Tetrapod digits
probably evolved from the many small bones (radials) at the end of the fin.
(A after [1, 85]; C after [85].)
17_EVOL4E_CH17.indd 448 3/22/17 1:37 PM