Higham Lab

University of California, Riverside

The rise of pelagic sharks and adaptive evolution of pectoral fin morphology during the Cretaceous.


Journal article


Phillip C. Sternes, Lars Schmitz, T. Higham
Current Biology, 2024

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APA   Click to copy
Sternes, P. C., Schmitz, L., & Higham, T. (2024). The rise of pelagic sharks and adaptive evolution of pectoral fin morphology during the Cretaceous. Current Biology.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Sternes, Phillip C., Lars Schmitz, and T. Higham. “The Rise of Pelagic Sharks and Adaptive Evolution of Pectoral Fin Morphology during the Cretaceous.” Current Biology (2024).


MLA   Click to copy
Sternes, Phillip C., et al. “The Rise of Pelagic Sharks and Adaptive Evolution of Pectoral Fin Morphology during the Cretaceous.” Current Biology, 2024.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{phillip2024a,
  title = {The rise of pelagic sharks and adaptive evolution of pectoral fin morphology during the Cretaceous.},
  year = {2024},
  journal = {Current Biology},
  author = {Sternes, Phillip C. and Schmitz, Lars and Higham, T.}
}

Abstract

The emergence and subsequent evolution of pectoral fins is a key point in vertebrate evolution, as pectoral fins are dominant control surfaces for locomotion in extant fishes.1,2,3 However, major gaps remain in our understanding of the diversity and evolution of pectoral fins among cartilaginous fishes (Chondrichthyes), a group with an evolutionary history spanning over 400 million years with current selachians (modern sharks) appearing about 200 million years ago.4,5,6 Modern sharks are a charismatic group of vertebrates often thought to be predators roaming the open ocean and coastal areas, but most extant species occupy the seafloor.4 Here we use an integrative approach to understand what facilitated the expansion to the pelagic realm and what morphological changes accompanied this shift. On the basis of comparative analyses in the framework of a time-calibrated molecular phylogeny,7 we show that modern sharks expanded to the pelagic realm no later than the Early Cretaceous (Barremian). The pattern of pectoral fin aspect ratios across selachians is congruent with adaptive evolution, and we identify an increase of the subclade disparity of aspect ratio at a time when sea surface temperatures were at their highest.8 The expansion to open ocean habitats likely involved extended bouts of sustained fast swimming, which led to the selection for efficient movement via higher aspect ratio pectoral fins. Swimming performance was likely enhanced in pelagic sharks during this time due to the elevated temperatures in the sea, highlighting that shark evolution has been greatly impacted by climate change.