Episode 122: Strange Shark Ancestors

Published: June 3, 2019, 7 a.m.

b'This week let\\u2019s learn about some ancestors of sharks and shark relatives that looked very strange compared to most sharks today!\\n\\nStethacanthus fossil and what the living fish might have looked like:\\n\\n \\n\\nTwo Falcatus fossils, female above, male below with his dorsal spine visible:\\n\\n\\n\\nXenacanthus looked more like an eel than a shark:\\n\\n\\n\\nPtychodus was really big, but not as big as the things that ate it:\\n\\n\\n\\nA Helicoprion tooth whorl and what a living Helicoprion might have looked like:\\n\\n \\n\\nShow transcript:\\n\\nWelcome to Strange Animals Podcast. I\\u2019m your host, Kate Shaw.\\n\\nThis week we\\u2019re going back in time again to learn about some animals that are long-extinct\\u2026but they\\u2019re not land animals. Yes, it\\u2019s a weird fish episode, but this one is about shark relatives!\\n\\nThe first shark ancestor is found in the fossil record around 420 million years ago, although since all we have are scales, we don\\u2019t know exactly what those fish looked like. The first true shark was called Cladoselache [clay-dough-sell-a-kee] and lived around 370 million years ago, at the same time as dunkleosteus and other massive armored fish. We covered dunkleosteus and other placoderms back in episode 33. Cladoselache grew up to four feet long, or 1.2 meters, and was a fast swimmer. We know Cladoselache ate fish because we have some fossils of Cladoselache with fish fossils in the digestive system\\u2014whole fish fossils, which suggests that cladoselache swallowed its prey whole. Cladoselache also had fin spines in front of its dorsal fins that made the fins stronger, but unlike its descendants, it didn\\u2019t have denticles in its skin. It didn\\u2019t have scales at all.\\n\\nThe denticles in shark skin aren\\u2019t just protection for the shark, they also strengthen the skin to allow for the attachment of stronger muscles. That\\u2019s why sharks are such fast swimmers.\\n\\n[Jaws theme]\\n\\nStethacanthidae was a family of fish that went extinct around 300 million years ago. It was related to ratfish and their relatives, including sharks. Stethacanthus is the most well-known of the stethacanthidae. It grew a little over 2 feet long, or 70 cm, and was probably a bottom-dwelling fish that lived in shallow waters. It ate crustaceans, small fish, cephalopods, and other small animals.\\n\\nWe have some good fossils of various species of Stethacanthidae and they show one feature that didn\\u2019t get passed down to modern ratfish or sharks. That\\u2019s the shape of its first dorsal fin, the one that in shark movies cuts through the water just before something awful happens.\\n\\n[Jaws theme again]\\n\\nStethacanthidae\\u2019s dorsal fin was really weird. It was shaped sort of like a scrub brush on a pedestal, with the bristles sticking upwards, which is sometimes referred to as a spine-brush complex. Researchers aren\\u2019t sure why its fin was shaped in such a way, but since it appears that only males had the oddly shaped fin, it was probably for display. It also had a patch of the same kind of short bristly denticles on its head. Males also had a long spine that grew from each pectoral fin that was probably also for display. Some researchers think the males fought each other by pushing head to head, possibly helped by the odd-shaped dorsal fin.\\n\\nIn the past, before researchers figured out that only the males had the strange dorsal fin, some people suggested that the fish may have used the fin as a sucker pad to attach to other, larger fish and hitch a ride. This is what remoras do. Remoras have a modified dorsal fin that is oval-shaped and acts like a sucker. The oval contains flexible membranes that the remora can raise or lower to create suction. The remora attaches to a larger animal like a shark, a whale, or a turtle and lets the animal carry it around. In return, the remora eats parasites from the host animal\\u2019s skin. But remoras aren\\u2019t related to sharks.\\n\\nOther shark relatives had dorsal spines. Falcatus falcatus lived about the same time as Stethacanthus, around 325 million years ago.'