Zachelmie trackways
The Zachelmie trackways are a series of Middle Devonian-age trace fossils in Poland, purportedly the oldest evidence of terrestrial vertebrates in the fossil record. These trackways were discovered in the Wojciechowice Formation, an Eifelian-age carbonate unit exposed in the Zachełmie Quarry of the Świętokrzyskie Mountains. The discovery of these tracks has complicated the study of tetrapod evolution. Morphological studies suggest that four-limbed vertebrates are descended from a specialized type of tetrapodomorph fish, the elpistostegalians. This hypothesis was supported further by the discovery and 2006 description of Tiktaalik, a well-preserved elpistostegalian from the Frasnian of Nunavut. Crucial to this idea is the assumption that tetrapods originated in the Late Devonian, after elpistostegalians appear in the fossil record near the start of the Frasnian. The Zachelmie trackways, however, appear to demonstrate that tetrapods were present prior to the Late Devonian. The implications of this find has led to several different perspectives on the sequence of events involved in tetrapod evolution.
Discovery
In January 2010, a group of paleontologists published a paper which showed that the first tetrapods appeared long before any known fossils of Tiktaalik or other elpistostegids. This paper was accompanied by extensive supplementary material and also discussed in a Nature documentary on the origin of tetrapods. Their conclusions were based on numerous trackways and individual footprints discovered at the Zachełmie quarry.A tetrapod origin of those tracks was suggested based on:
- Distinct digits and limb morphology;
- Trackways reflecting quadrupedal gait and diagonal walk;
- No body or tail drag marks;
- Very wide stride in relation to body length ;
- Various size footprints with some unusually big indicating body lengths of over 2.5 m.
A reanalysis by Martin Qvarnström, Piotr Szrek, Per Ahlberg, and Grzegorz Niedźwiedzki, of the paleoenvironment of the Zachelmie trackways were reinterpreted as "a succession of ephemeral lakes with a restricted and non-marine biota, rather than a marginal marine environment as originally thought". This shows that the purported tetrapods associated with the trackways were likely capable of terrestrial locomotion.
Implications for tetrapod evolution
TiktaalikNarkiewicz, co-author of the article on the Zachelmie trackways, claimed that the Polish "discovery has disproved the theory that elpistostegids were the ancestors of tetrapods", a notion partially shared by Philippe Janvier.
Spencer Lucas questions if the Zachelmie trackways were made by tetrapods due to the inconsistent size of the tracks and morphology of the manus and pes being inconsistent with known tetrapod trackways. The morphology of the trackways and the freshwater environmental setting are suggested to be consistent with fish feeding traces/nests.
Several new hypotheses have been suggested to resolve the origin and phylogenetic position of the elpistostegids relative to tetrapods:
- Their phylogenetic position remains unchanged and the footprints found in the Holy Cross Mountains are attributed to tetrapods but as a result there are at least six long ghost lineages separating Zachelmie trackmakers from various elpistostegalian and ichthyostegalian species;
- They were "late-surviving relics rather than direct transitional forms";
- They were a result of convergent or parallel evolution. This would indicate that many of the apomorphies and striking anatomical similarities found in both digit-bearing tetrapods and elpistostegalians evolved at least twice, potentially for the same ecological utility. This would indicate that elpisostegids went extinct in the Late Devonian without any descendants, an "evolutionary dead-end" as some have phrased it. Homoplasy is considered responsible for several supposedly unique tetrapod features which are also found in non-elpistostegalian Paleozoic fish. The lobe-finned rhizodont Sauripterus has finger-like jointed distal radial bones, while the actinopterygian Tarrasius has a tetrapod-like spinal column with 5 axial regions.