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In the wild, Andrew feeds on fish, sponges, small crustaceans, nematode worms and protozoans.

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Benny's diet is very specialized, consisting mainly of the interior of Ramy nuts, nectar from the Traveller's Palm tree, some fungi and insect grubs. He is also known to raid coconut plantations, and has been seen eating lychees and mangoes, which are also plantation crops.

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It's a Fish-Eat-Giant Salamander-Eat-Shark World

Category: amphibianfishfossilshark
Posted on: November 12, 2007 9:40 AM, by ableiman

Reported last month in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B, a fascinating fossil was discovered in the Saar-Nahe Basin of Southwestern Germany (sounds more like somewhere in Middle-earth than Bavaria to us, but go figure). The fossil(s?) comprises a fish that was eaten by an amphibian which was eaten by a shark. It is being described as the oldest snapshot of the vertebrate food chain and represents, if nothing else, some good eatin'.

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In case you couldn't visualize it, this last graphic is an EXACT snapshot of what this prehistoric brunch orgy looked like...

The shark lived in what was once a freshwater lake in the area. There are only a handful of sharks that live their entire lives in freshwater today, but during the Permian Period it appears you had to worry about sharks pretty much everywhere. The amphibian belongs to the group temnospondyls, which physically resembled crocodiles about 100 million years before crocodiles actually emerged on the scene. The fish belonged to the primitive acanthodians group, which tasted like oily fish sticks approximately 248-290 million years before the Gordon's Fisherman first made an appearance.

The fossil is particularly interesting because the shark must have been encased in sediment rapidly just after eating, as the digestive acids would typically breakdown the meal very quickly. "The shark didn't just die and sink down and decompose. It was probably still alive when it got trapped under a rapid influx of sediment from surrounding hills," said co-author Jürgen Kriwet, a paleontologist from Berlin's Museum of Natural History.

"The fish was swallowed side on, otherwise the spines could have got stuck in the amphibian's mouth or throat," Kriwet said. "The fish is situated in quite the correct area of digestive tract of the amphibian," said study co-author Ulriche Heidtke, a paleontologist from the National History Museum of the Palatinate in Bad Dürkheim, Germany.

"It clearly shows the hallmarks of digestion, [such as] disintegration. If the shark had eaten the fish first and then the amphibian, they would be placed one after the other in the shark's stomach," he explained.

Comments

The poorly known Glyphis sharks are regarded as entirely freshwater, at least some species.

Posted by: neil | November 12, 2007 12:16 PM

You guys crack me up. Keep the articles coming. Ever think of getting into science writing? Discover could use the humor.

Posted by: Dara | November 12, 2007 1:43 PM

I can't help but think of this as a sort of precursor to the TURDUCKEN phenomenon.

Posted by: arachnophile | November 12, 2007 9:54 PM

arachnophile - i was trying to figure out what that damn thing was called this morning when i was writing the post. well said.

Posted by: Andrew | November 12, 2007 11:46 PM

Now if they could find a fossilized lobster stuffed with tacos, that'd be even better!

Posted by: Jenbug | November 13, 2007 1:41 PM

dibs on the "Turducken" analogy! My SVP notebook bears the words: Paleozoic Turducken in great red caps.

Posted by: neil | November 15, 2007 2:25 AM

We now know that there is an evolutionary basis for this!

http://youtube.com/watch?v=yZdKk0snmoY

Posted by: Benny | November 15, 2007 10:31 AM

LOL, I'm glad it occured to you as well Andrew, and Neil.

Posted by: arachnophile | November 23, 2007 3:53 PM

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