Fossil Find Sheds Light on Fish Evolution Gaps

University of Michigan
A marine bonytongue fish from Egypt's Qreiya 3 site, related to living freshwater arowanas. Image credit: Professor Hesham Sallam, Mansoura University Vertebrate Paleontology Center
A marine bonytongue fish from Egypt's Qreiya 3 site, related to living freshwater arowanas. Image credit: Professor Hesham Sallam, Mansoura University Vertebrate Paleontology Center

Study: Rise of Modern Fishes Captured in an Early Paleocene Lagerstätte

Fish have a missing chapter in their history: after an asteroid slammed into Earth 66 million years ago, there is very little evidence of fish in the fossil record.

When whole fossil fish skeletons become common again about 10 million years after the asteroid impact, they include many species that look different than those that came before, leaving scientists to wonder what evolutionary paths fishes took between about 66 and 56 million years ago. Now, a research team including University of Michigan graduate student Sanaa El-Sayed has discovered the earliest known examples of six modern fish groups that still swim in Earth's seas today.

Sanaa El-Sayed, lead author and MUVP researcher, at the Qreiya 3 site. Image credit: Professor Hesham Sallam, Mansoura University Vertebrate Paleontology Center
Sanaa El-Sayed

The finding, published in Science Advances, describes marine fishes dated to 62.2 million years ago, helping to fill a 10 million year interval with sparse fossil information about modern fish evolution. Among the findings include the earliest known fossil skeletons of jack, a type of sportfish, moonfish and pipefish, the family to which seahorses belong.

The first clues of the new fish site in the Eastern Desert of Egypt came from a geologist who provided dates for the deposit. El-Sayed realized that this earlier study mentioned a fish fossil bed, dated to almost the middle of the 10 million year fossil record gap. She, along with the lab team of Hesham Sallam, founder of the Mansoura University Vertebrate Paleontology Center (MUVP) in Egypt, began excavating the site.

Complete skeleton of the oldest jack fish, part of the group that includes modern jacks and trevallies. Image credit: Professor Hesham Sallam, Mansoura University Vertebrate Paleontology Center
A close-up of sharp teeth in an early relative of modern tunas. Image credit: Professor Hesham Sallam, Mansoura University Vertebrate Paleontology Center
Fossil skeleton of the oldest known tuna-related fish. Image credit: Professor Hesham Sallam, Mansoura University Vertebrate Paleontology Center
A newly uncovered fossil jack fish, photographed in the field shortly after its discovery. Image credit: Professor Hesham Sallam, Mansoura University Vertebrate Paleontology Center

"We have this 10 million year gap with a very limited fossil record. We know the asteroid impacted the marine environment, but it was unclear how the oceans came to have these modern fishes," said El-Sayed, a doctoral candidate in the U-M Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences and Museum of Paleontology, who led the work. "It was mindblowing that this site is now helping us answer the questions of when and where and what was present in the modern ocean just a few million years after the dinosaurs went extinct."

Matt Friedman
Matt Friedman

In total, the researchers discovered 21 kinds of fishes across nine orders of fish. Most of the fishes are percomorphs, a major group in today's oceans but which were relatively uncommon during the age of dinosaurs, according to Matt Friedman, co-author of the study and director and curator of the U-M Museum of Paleontology.

The findings also reinforce the idea that the biological crisis event linked to the asteroid impact, called the Cretaceous-Paleogene (K-Pg) extinction, led to the demise of certain kinds of fishes, followed by the rapid establishment of other groups of fishes that look distinctly modern.

The research was supported by Mansoura University in Egypt, National Geographic, the Ministry of Higher Education of the Arab Republic of Egypt, the American Association of University Women, the Paleontological Scientific Trust, the U.S. National Science Foundation and U-M.

A newly discovered fossil moonfish, the oldest known example of a group still living today. Moonfish are the most abundant fish at the site. Image credit: Professor Hesham Sallam, Mansoura University Vertebrate Paleontology Center
A first glimpse of the body armor of an early relative of modern pipefishes and seahorses, photographed at the moment of discovery. Image credit: Professor Hesham Sallam, Mansoura University Vertebrate Paleontology Center
The newly uncovered upper jaw of a marine fossil fish related to modern freshwater arowanas. Image credit: Professor Hesham Sallam, Mansoura University Vertebrate Paleontology Center
MUVP team excavating fossils at the Qreiya 3 site in Egypt's Eastern Desert, July 2023. Image credit: Professor Hesham Sallam, Mansoura University Vertebrate Paleontology Center

Patterson's Gap

Part of the fossil collection recovered during the 2023 Qreiya 3 field expedition, photographed at the Mansoura University Vertebrate Paleontology Center in Egypt after the end of fieldwork. Image credit: Professor Hesham Sallam, Mansoura University Vertebrate Paleontology Center
Part of the fossil collection recovered during the 2023 Qreiya 3 field expedition, photographed at the Mansoura University Vertebrate Paleontology Center in Egypt after the end of fieldwork. Image credit: Professor Hesham Sallam, Mansoura University Vertebrate Paleontology Center

Friedman has long been vexed by a fossil-poor part of the record around the K-Pg, a gap he and colleagues called Patterson's Gap after a paleontologist who had previously noted it. Because of its timing, the gap muddies our picture of how fishes were impacted by the extinction.

"This gap early in the Cenozoic record leads to two interrelated questions," said Friedman, also a professor in the Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences.

"First, did the fish that we generally assume went extinct at the end of the Cretaceous Period really not limp into the next interval, called the Paleogene, and we've just missed them because the record is poor? Second, when did the more familiar modern groups appear? The gap represents a long span of time during which we have poor grasp of what happened, and it's frustratingly coincident with one of the most interesting intervals of Earth's more recent history."

Perhaps, researchers thought, that the gap in the fossil record meant the conditions did not exist during that time period to optimally preserve fish as fossils. That meant uncertainty about which groups the extinction impacted and how recovery proceeded.

"Here we have this remarkable deposit that opens a new window on this critical time. There are plenty of skeletons preserved, but none of the kinds of fishes we thought went extinct were there," Friedman said. "Our findings suggest that those fish likely did go extinct at or around that major cataclysm at the end of the Cretaceous, rather than their absence just reflecting a lousy record. At the same time, the site provides direct evidence that a lot of these modern-looking fish groups were established pretty early on."

Members of the Sallam Lab, Mansoura University Vertebrate Paleontology Center field team at Qreiya 3. Front row, from left: Hesham Sallam (senior author), Shorouq Al-Ashaqar, and Sanaa El-Sayed (lead author). Back row, from left: Belal Salem, Abdullah Gohar, and Hossam El-Saqa. Image credit: Professor Hesham Sallam, Mansoura University Vertebrate Paleontology Center
Extreme field conditions at Qreiya 3, where temperatures often reached 50 °C, or about 122 °F. Image credit: Professor Hesham Sallam, Mansoura University Vertebrate Paleontology Center
Illustration of the Qreiya 3 fauna by Ian Baylatry. Image credit: Ian Baylatry
Sanaa El-Sayed, lead author of the study, examines a newly excavated fossil fish at Qreiya 3. Image credit: Professor Hesham Sallam, Mansoura University Vertebrate Paleontology Center

Branching out the fossil search

The Sallam Lab team after plastering part of the fossil fish layer at Qreiya 3, July 2023. From left: Hossam El-Saqa, Abdullah Gohar, Belal Salem, Shorouq Al-Asqar, and Sanaa El-Sayed. Image credit: Professor Hesham Sallam, Mansoura University Vertebrate Paleontology Center
The Sallam Lab team after plastering part of the fossil fish layer at Qreiya 3, July 2023. From left: Hossam El-Saqa, Abdullah Gohar, Belal Salem, Shorouq Al-Asqar, and Sanaa El-Sayed. Image credit: Professor Hesham Sallam, Mansoura University Vertebrate Paleontology Center

The researchers say there could be many reasons why the 10-million-year gap has occurred. One reason could be that the majority of paleontological work has been concentrated in Europe and North America, missing valuable deposits that might be present elsewhere-something El-Sayed hopes will change.

"It's always good to look at other places for finding fossils. We can't keep focusing on Europe and North America," she said. "New discoveries like this site in Egypt are showing us some of the oldest examples of this group, and this, in the long run, will change how we understand modern fish evolution. We are examining a site that's very well dated-62.2 million years old. It's hard to get more precise than that."

El-Sayed is also a senior student researcher at MUVP and assistant lecturer at Mansoura University, where she studied vertebrate paleontology as an undergraduate. There, she was the first student to work in the first lab in Egypt studying vertebrate fossils, led by Sallam, the first Egyptian scientist to earn a doctorate in vertebrate paleontology.

Sallam Lab fieldwork underway at Qreiya 3, where fossil-rich layers were excavated and protected with plaster.
Sallam Lab fieldwork underway at Qreiya 3, where fossil-rich layers were excavated and protected with plaster. Image credit: Professor Hesham Sallam, Mansoura University Vertebrate Paleontology Center

"What we are seeing now is only a small light illuminating a long and previously dark corridor in the early history of modern marine fish evolution. This Egyptian site shows that many important answers are still waiting to be discovered," Sallam said. "Exploring older and new fossil localities in Egypt will be a major focus of our ongoing collaboration between our center and the University of Michigan."

The study's co-authors include the geologist who first identified the site, Robert Speijer, of KU Leuven in Belgium, as well as Belal Salem, Abdullah Gohar, Shorouq Al Ashqar, Mohamed Amin and Hossam El-Saka of MUVP and U-M's Hadeel Saad.

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