homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Tape worm eggs found in 270 million year fossilized shark poop

If you think intestinal parasites are a recent problem, you’d better think again. Ancient tapeworm eggs found in 270-million-year-old shark poop suggests these parasites may have plagued animals for much longer than previously believed. Tapeworm are nasty parasites that clink to the walls of the intestines of virtually all vertebrates (animals that have a backbone); […]

Mihai Andrei
January 31, 2013 @ 5:04 am

share Share

If you think intestinal parasites are a recent problem, you’d better think again. Ancient tapeworm eggs found in 270-million-year-old shark poop suggests these parasites may have plagued animals for much longer than previously believed.

fossil coprolite

The fossil coprolite

Tapeworm are nasty parasites that clink to the walls of the intestines of virtually all vertebrates (animals that have a backbone); their favorite victims are fish, pigs, cows, and humans. When the parasites grow, they release their eggs through their victim’s feces. However, investigating the early history of these creatures is extremely tricky, because fossils dating back to the age of the dinosaurs are very rare; another way to analyze them however, is through coprolites – which is just a name for fossilized dung.

Now, paleontologists found a spiral-shaped coprolite from a shark that holds a cluster of no less than 93 oval tapeworm eggs; one of them actually contains a probable developing larva, which held a cluster of fiberlike objects that may have been the beginnings of hooklets which it would have later used to attach to the intestine walls. They found this by cutting the coprolites into thin slices.

tapeworm-eggs-shark

“Luckily in one of them, we found the eggs,” researcher Paula Dentzien-Dias, a paleontologist at the Federal University of the Rio Grande in Brazil, explained. “The eggs were found in only one thin section.”

The fossils unearthed in Brazil actually go back much further than the age dinosaurs ruled the Earth, back Paleozoic era (251 million to 542 million years ago). This predates the earlies evidence of parasites by 140 million years.

This specific coprolite was found with 500 others, and researchers believe the area was once a freshwater pond where many fish got trapped together during a dry period. This theory is backed up by a mineral called pyrite (“fool’s gold”), also found in the coprolites – this suggests the area was poor in oxygen, something which helped preserve the fossils so well.

The findings were published in PLoS ONE

share Share

Scientists Just Found Arctic Algae That Can Move in Ice at –15°C

The algae at the bottom of the world are alive, mobile, and rewriting biology’s rulebook.

Satellite data shows New York City is still sinking -- and so are many big US cities

No, it’s not because of the recent flooding.

How Bees Use the Sun for Navigation Even on Cloudy Days

Bees see differently than humans, for them the sky is more than just blue.

Scientists Solved a Key Mystery Regarding the Evolution of Life on Earth

A new study brings scientists closer to uncovering how life began on Earth.

Mars Seems to Have a Hot, Solid Core and That's Surprisingly Earth-Like

Using a unique approach to observing marsquakes, researchers propose a structure for Mars' core.

Scientists Just Discovered a Massive Source of Drinking Water Hiding Beneath the Atlantic Ocean

Scientists drill off Cape Cod and uncover vast undersea aquifers that may reshape our water future.

This Bizarre Deep Sea Fish Uses a Tooth-Covered Forehead Club to Grip Mates During Sex

Scientists studying a strange deep sea fish uncovered the first true teeth outside the jaw.

Daddy longlegs have two more eyes they've been hiding from us

The eyes are relics form their evolutionary past.

The "Skeleton flower" turns translucent when it comes in contact with water

The "skeleton form" is because of the unusual way the flower generates color.

Spiders Are Trapping Fireflies in Their Webs and Using Their Glow to Lure Fresh Prey

Trapped fireflies become bait in a rare case of predatory outsourcing.