PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Deep-sea marvels: How anglerfish defy evolutionary expectations

2024-12-02
(Press-News.org) A groundbreaking Rice University study sheds light on the extraordinary evolution of anglerfish, a group of deep-sea dwellers whose bizarre adaptations have captivated scientists and the public alike. The research, published in Nature Ecology & Evolution, uncovers how these enigmatic creatures defied the odds to diversify in the harsh, resource-poor environment of the bathypelagic zone — part of the open ocean that extends from 3,300 to 13,000 feet below the ocean’s surface.

Led by a team of biologists including Rice’s Kory Evans and his former undergraduate student Rose Faucher, the study analyzed the evolutionary journey of anglerfish (Lophiiformes) as they transitioned from seafloor habitats to the open waters of the deep sea. Through cutting-edge genetic analysis and 3D imaging of museum specimens, the researchers reconstructed the evolutionary tree of anglerfish and identified the morphological innovations that allowed these animals to thrive in an environment considered among the most challenging on Earth.

Anglerfish are best known for their bioluminescent lures, which dangle from their foreheads to attract prey in the perpetual darkness of the deep sea. However, their evolutionary story goes far beyond this striking adaptation. The study reveals that the deep-sea pelagic anglerfish (ceratioids) originated from a benthic or seafloor-dwelling ancestor. This ancestor lived on the continental slope before transitioning to the open waters of the bathypelagic zone in a transition that set the stage for rapid evolutionary change. The ceratioids then developed features such as larger jaws, smaller eyes and laterally compressed bodies — adaptations tailored to life in an environment with limited food and no sunlight.

Despite these directional trends, however, ceratioids also displayed remarkable variability in body shapes from the archetypical globose anglerfish to elongated forms like the “wolftrap” phenotype, which features a jaw structure resembling a trap. This finding is the most surprising of the study, for the bathypelagic zone did not constrain evolution as expected despite its apparent lack of ecological diversity. Instead, anglerfish achieved high levels of phenotypic disparity, greater than their benthic relatives in both shallow and deep waters. This suggests rather than being limited by the environmental challenges of the deep sea, ceratioids explored new evolutionary possibilities, diversifying their body forms and hunting strategies.

“With their unique traits like bioluminescent lures and large oral gapes, deep-sea anglerfish may be one of the few documented examples of adaptive radiation in the resource-limited bathypelagic zone,” said Evans, a co-corresponding author on the paper and assistant professor of biosciences. “These traits likely gave anglerfish an edge in exploiting scarce resources and navigating the extreme conditions of their environment, although we don’t have strong evidence directly linking this diversity to this kind of resource specialization.”

Evans noted that the research leaves room for the possibility that nonadaptive processes, such as relaxed selection or random mutations, could also have contributed to the observed variability.

The researchers also compared anglerfish clades across different habitats and found more unexpected results. Coastal species like frogfish, which live in diverse and productive coral reef environments, exhibited much lower rates of evolutionary change than their counterparts in the deep sea.

“The idea that a resource-poor, homogenous environment — like being surrounded on all sides by nothing but water — would produce diverse body and skull plans is really counterintuitive in this field,” said Faucher, who was co-first author of the paper along with Elizabeth Christina Miller, a postdoctoral fellow at University of California, Irvine. “When fish have different features to interact with, like corals and plants in shallow water or sand and rocks on the seafloor, that’s when we would expect fish to have a lot of variation in shape. Instead, we’re seeing it in these deep-sea fish who have nothing but water to interact with.”

The researchers used a combination of advanced methods to conduct this study. They constructed a phylogeny of anglerfish using data from 1,092 genetic loci across 132 species, representing approximately 38% of described species, complemented by fossil calibrations and genomic data to estimate divergence times and ancestral habitats. Morphological data were collected from museum specimens, including linear body measurements and 3D skull shape analyses via micro-CT scans. To evaluate evolutionary trends, the researchers applied phylogenetic comparative methods to assess phenotypic and lineage diversification, while disparity analyses quantified the extent of morphological variation across anglerfish clades and habitats. They then employed Bayesian models to reconstruct ancestral habitats, revealing that ceratioids originated from benthic ancestors before transitioning to the pelagic zone. Finally, principal component analyses visualized how anglerfish occupied different regions of phenotypic space, shedding light on evolutionary trends in body, skull and jaw shapes.

“Anglerfish are a perfect example of how life can innovate under extreme constraints,” said Evans. “This work not only enhances our understanding of deep-sea biodiversity but also illustrates the resilience and creativity of evolution.”

This study’s significance extends beyond the evolutionary history of anglerfish. It provides valuable insights into how life adapts to extreme environments. The deep sea is one of the least understood ecosystems on Earth, yet it plays a critical role in global biodiversity and the planet’s carbon cycle. Understanding how organisms like anglerfish thrive in such conditions helps scientists predict how life might respond to environmental changes, including those caused by climate change. Moreover, the study touches on broader questions of macroevolution: how new species arise, adapt and diversify. By showing that even resource-poor environments can foster significant evolutionary radiation, the research challenges conventional wisdom and opens new avenues for studying evolution in extreme habitats.

This research was supported in part by FishLife (National Science Foundation DEB-1541554 and NSF DEB-2144325); NSF Postdoctoral Fellowships (DBI-1906574 and DBI-2109469); NSF DEB-2237278; NSF DEB-2144325 and NSF DEB-2015404.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Using race and ethnicity to estimate disease risk improves prediction accuracy but may yield limited clinical net benefit

2024-12-02
Embargoed for release until 5:00 p.m. ET on Monday 2 December 2024     @Annalsofim          Below please find summaries of new articles that will be published in the next issue of Annals of Internal Medicine. The summaries are not intended to substitute for the full articles as a source of information. This information is under strict embargo and by taking it into possession, media representatives are committing to the terms of the embargo not only on their own behalf, but also on behalf of the organization they represent.          ----------------------------          Using ...

Sir Gustav Nossal Professor of Immunology to honor giant of Australian science

Sir Gustav Nossal Professor of Immunology to honor giant of Australian science
2024-12-02
The exceptional research, discovery and advocacy legacy of former WEHI director and Australian treasure Sir Gustav Nossal AC CBE will continue through an ongoing professorship, announced today by WEHI and the Nossal family.  Launched with a generous gift from the Nossal family, the Sir Gustav Nossal Professor of Immunology is a prestigious new position that will lead pivotal research to advance human immunology.  An international search is now underway for an outstanding candidate who will become the first Nossal Professor, a role that will build on Sir Gus’ ...

CMS launches new mandatory kidney transplant payment model

2024-12-02
INDIANAPOLIS -- A new final rule issued by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services this week for a mandatory alternative payment model called the Increasing Organ Transplant Access (IOTA) Model aimed to improve the number of life-saving kidney transplants for patients whose kidneys have failed. The new rule will test whether performance-based upside or downside risk payments among a selected subset of kidney transplant hospitals increase access to kidney transplants for patients with end-stage kidney disease while maintaining or improving the quality of care and reducing Medicare ...

Accelerating climate modeling with generative AI

Accelerating climate modeling with generative AI
2024-12-02
The algorithms behind generative AI tools like DallE, when combined with physics-based data, can be used to develop better ways to model the Earth’s climate. Computer scientists in Seattle and San Diego have now used this combination to create a model that is capable of predicting climate patterns over 100 years 25 times faster than the state of the art. Specifically, the model, called Spherical DYffusion, can project 100 years of climate patterns in 25 hours–a simulation that would take weeks for other models. In addition, existing state-of-the-art models need to run on supercomputers. This model can run on GPU clusters in a research lab.  “Data-driven ...

Study details surprising biological mechanisms underlying severe COVID-19

2024-12-02
Severe COVID-19 arises in part from the SARS-CoV-2 virus’s impact on mitochondria, tiny oxygen-burning power plants in cells, which can help trigger a cascade of organ- and immune system-damaging events, suggests a study by investigators at Weill Cornell Medicine, Johns Hopkins Medicine, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, and the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, along with other members of the COVID-19 International Research Team. Severe COVID-19 has been considered an inflammatory ...

University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus-led team receives up to $46 million to develop innovative treatment to cure blindness

2024-12-02
The University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus will receive up to $46 million from the Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health (ARPA-H) Transplantation of Human Eye Allografts (THEA) program to advance pioneering research aimed at curing total blindness through human eye transplantation. The award will support the work of the Total Human Eye-allotransplantation Innovation Advancement (THEIA) project team led by CU. The project is led by principal investigator and surgeon-scientist Kia Washington, MD, and co-principal investigator Christene A. Huang, ...

$1.7 million CDC grant will allow researchers to study spina bifida across the lifespan

$1.7 million CDC grant will allow researchers to study spina bifida across the lifespan
2024-12-02
Researchers at the University of Arizona College of Medicine – Tucson received $1.7 million in funding from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to improve knowledge regarding the prevalence, mortality and health outcomes for people of all ages living with spina bifida. Spina bifida is a birth defect that occurs when an embryo’s spinal cord does not properly close during the third and fourth weeks of pregnancy, resulting in a gap in the spine. According to the CDC, spina bifida occurs in 1 ...

Study: Even low levels of arsenic in drinking water raise kidney cancer risk

2024-12-02
New research findings from the Texas A&M University School of Public Health indicate that exposure to even low levels of arsenic poses significant health risks, including an increased risk of kidney cancer. The incidence of kidney cancer in the United States rose by an average of 1.2 percent each year between 2011 and 2019 to become the seventh most common cancer. In the meantime, smoking — a well-established risk factor for kidney cancer — has continued to decline. This led researchers to consider other possible contributing factors, including arsenic, a known cause of various cancers that is naturally occurring ...

How a middle schooler found a new compound in a piece of goose poop

How a middle schooler found a new compound in a piece of goose poop
2024-12-02
A group of young students became bonafide biomedical scientists before they even started high school. Through a partnership with a nearby university, the middle schoolers collected and analyzed environmental samples to find new antibiotic candidates. One unique sample, goose poop collected at a local park, had a bacterium that showed antibiotic activity and contained a novel compound that slowed the growth of human melanoma and ovarian cancer cells in lab tests. Inequities in educational resources, especially those in science, engineering, technology and math (STEM), where ...

UBCO researchers engineer DNA to mimic biological catch bonds

UBCO researchers engineer DNA to mimic biological catch bonds
2024-12-02
In a first-of-its-kind breakthrough, a team of UBC Okanagan researchers has developed an artificial adhesion system that closely mimics natural biological interactions. Dr. Isaac Li and his team in the Irving K. Barber Faculty of Science study biophysics at the single-molecule and single-cell levels. Their research focuses on understanding how cells physically interact with each other and their environment, with the ultimate goal of developing innovative tools for disease diagnosis and therapy. Two of Dr. Li’s doctoral students, Micah Yang and David Bakker, have engineered a new molecule that could transform how cells adhere to and communicate with one another. Micah Yang, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Infertility linked to onset of systemic autoimmune rheumatic disease after childbirth

Researchers use data from citizen scientists to uncover the mysteries of a blue low-latitude aurora

Possible colon cancer vaccine target uncovered in bacteria

Eating dark chocolate linked with reduced risk of type 2 diabetes

Eating dark but not milk chocolate linked to reduced risk of type 2 diabetes

End food and drink industry’s infiltration of UK children’s education, say experts

Concerns over potential harms of tests advertised directly to consumers

War in Lebanon has turned a decade of education crisis into a catastrophe - report

Spotted lanternflies in the US are living longer—and cities may be helping them spread

Slingshot spiders listen to fire off ballistic webs when they hear mosquitoes within range

SwRI-led study explores risks of chemical exposure from household products

X-ray vision: Seeing through the mystery of an X-ray emissions mechanism

AI fact checks can increase belief in false headlines

Poor health outcomes—including early deaths—linger for decades for those who lived in ‘redlined’ neighborhoods

Abnormal prenatal blood test results could indicate hidden maternal cancers

Study finds people on anti-obesity medications cut both weight and alcohol consumption

ETSU secures $900k defense grant

ETSU researcher earns grant to build flood dashboard using generative AI

AI-enabled analysis of images meant to catch one disease can reveal others

Key objections to collecting immigration status data in national health surveys

Clinical trial of device aims to induce ovulation in women with polycystic ovary syndrome

Natural ‘biopesticide’ against malaria mosquitoes successful in early field tests

NSF-Piedmont Triad Regenerative Medicine Engine (PTRME) awards $2.5 million in grants to drive economic growth

How plant enzymes can adapt to higher temperatures

The Gerontological Society of America congratulates new 2024 Awardees

New facility for evaluating hydrogen-compatible materials now complete

Manta rays inspire the fastest swimming soft robot yet

With a quarter-century of data on gun usage, new study examines when and why people start carrying guns and if they persist in doing so

How did humans and dogs become friends? Connections in the Americas began 12,000 years ago

A third of people from Chicago carry concealed handguns in public before they reach middle age, major 25-year study finds

[Press-News.org] Deep-sea marvels: How anglerfish defy evolutionary expectations