Jaekelopterus

If you've been following Lio lately, you know he has a new arthropod friend, rescued from the dinner pot.

i-c5d18c0751176a46e99d2ab09526db78-lio071120-1.gif

Unfortunately, Lio missed the big news.

The fossil record has yielded various gigantic arthropods, in contrast to their diminutive proportions today. The recent discovery of a 46cm long claw (chelicera) of the pterygotid eurypterid ('sea scorpion') Jaekelopterus rhenaniae, from the Early Devonian Willwerath Lagerstätte of Germany, reveals that this form attained a body length of approximately 2.5m--almost half a metre longer than previous estimates of the group, and the largest arthropod ever to have evolved. Gigantism in Late Palaeozoic arthropods is generally attributed to elevated atmospheric oxygen levels, but while this may be applicable to Carboniferous terrestrial taxa, gigantism among aquatic taxa is much more widespread and may be attributed to other extrinsic factors, including environmental resources, predation and competition. A phylogenetic analysis of the pterygotid clade reveals that Jaekelopterus is sister-taxon to the genus Acutiramus, and is among the most derived members of the pterygotids, in contrast to earlier suggestions.

i-ea682fcc5db9cabb3dbd2f851753fd3f-scorpion_claw.jpg

This isn't some casual graspy sort of claw, either—it's a great spiky wicked looking claw, with pointy daggery bits sticking out that make it look like some medieval weapon of terror.

This is a much more Lio-like creature than the dainty little bug in the cartoon. I wouldn't mind having one of these for a pet myself! It's too bad they've all been dead for 390 million years.


Braddy SJ, Poschmann M, Tetlie OE (2007) Giant claw reveals the largest ever arthropod. Biology Letters doi:10.1098/rsbl.2007.0491.

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My favorite part of this post is where the line break is: I came to "46 cm long" and I'm thinking, "oh, that isn't so big what is he talking about" and then the next line drops the bomb: "claw."

Oh. "46 cm long claw." Gulp.

By fardels bear (not verified) on 21 Nov 2007 #permalink

Pass me the drawn butter.... and the pole-axe.

Since the Early Devonian was before the Fall, I'm sure those claws were only used for opening seeds, or perhaps for giving Adam backrubs.

By the way, where are all the "Where's the Science?" concern trolls? Today's posts should be more than enough to sate their inquisitive minds.

Very cool, but I can't help being a bit skeptical. I mean, look at the name--it is practically "jackelope-terus"--if this were April 1, maybe, then the evidence would be a postcard of a crawdad strapped to the top of a station wagon.

A 46 cm long chelicera... that's a bit longer than this Mac keyboard is broad, and that's just a chelicera... :-o

That beast wouldn't fit through the door of this room!

I smell a Jurassic Park ripoff coming.

By David Marjanović (not verified) on 21 Nov 2007 #permalink

Ineresting point Dan. I suppose these beasties succumbed to the winds of change, as well.

Posted by: Brownian, OM

Perhaps it was a Blackout during one of those Big City Nights.

"a 46cm long claw (chelicera)"
um shouldn't that actually read either "pedipalp" or "chelaes"? (not that getting near the cheliceres would be very pleasant either)

I feel a Godzilla movie coming on.

Pass me the drawn butter.... and the pole-axe.

I see we're not yet familiar with Gorton's Law...

In my favorite Michael Moorcock story, The Dancers At The End Of Time (published at least 30 years ago), similar giant Eurypterids ate several of Captain Mubbers' Lat crew. This new find is only 10/15% longer than the Eurypterids that were already well known back then.

Jaekelopterus rhenaniae is a wonderful find that shows these apex predators were even more diverse than previously known.

The Lat are, of course, known for having the most obscene language in the Universe; Hrunt Mblix Krufroodi being the filthiest phrase in their language. Sadly, it has no meaning in any Human language since, like most obscenities, it refers to body parts involved in reproduction and humans/vertebrates do not have pneumatic bags on their limb joints.

A phylogenetic analysis of the pterygotid clade reveals that Jaekelopterus is sister-taxon to the genus Acutiramus, and is among the most derived members of the pterygotids, in contrast to earlier suggestions.

Ouch! Why not tell us how you really feel! Just call it plagiarism and get it over with!

Would this belong to the same genus as a blast-ended skrewt?

No, I think it is more closely related to the lobstrosity.

By fnord prefect (not verified) on 21 Nov 2007 #permalink

Noah must have had to custom build a cage to contain that critter on the ark. Maybe it got out and ate the unicorns.

By Bride of Shrek (not verified) on 21 Nov 2007 #permalink

Well I had already secured a couple of spiny lobsters for my thanksgiving meal before I had heard about this discovery. I shall now relish them all the more, served over a bed of fresh whole wheat angel hair pasta. Accompanied by a nice chilled bottle or two of Pinot Grigio. Ah, yes, pass the butter please. Dessert will be a fresh tropical fruit cocktail served over a mango sorbet. Finalized by freshly brewed Brazilian coffee. A happy holiday feast to all!

By Fernando Magyar (not verified) on 21 Nov 2007 #permalink

Noah must have had to custom build a cage to contain that critter on the ark. Maybe it got out and ate the unicorns.

That relates pretty closely to a question I like to use to make biblical literalists squirm: "So, how did God ensure that the California Golden Trout survived the flood?". Their answers are usually really stupid, such as how God made sure small pockets of fresh water of just the right temperature would exist, thus allowing the species to survive. I'm pretty sure that was their favorite answer.

I heard that lobsters, if they don't get a parasite (pretty much the leading cause of natural death among these animals), can live indefinitely. Of course, those that live long enough get it; I think the practical limit was an incredible 200 years, and they just keep right on growing for their entire lives.

So I can already hear the creationist argument here; these aren't really a new species, they're just scorpions that, because they lived in God's perfect Eden-world, hadn't yet been introduced to parasites; and the oxygen-rich environment of the time enabled these scorpions to keep growing and growing, so technically, these aren't a different species, they just responded differently to the environment of the time.

There's a picture of Eden I never really had before: One infested with scorpions nearly 3 meters long.

"EVE!! RUN LIKE HECK!!" (They wouldn't have sworn; no apple yet.)

I mean, after all, didn't they say that squid aren't really alive? This theory is no stupider than how God ensured California Golden Trout survived. Just watch, some variation of what I'm saying will show up on AIG pretty soon.

Everyone, enjoy your turkey tomorrow. Let's just forget about all these stupid creationists for one day, and be thankful for our family, friends and each other. Sounds good to me.

I won't even watch football.

The best thing about 8-foot-long scorpions:

It's really hard for them to hide in your hiking boot.

Lio is walking a lobster. Who does he think he is, André Breton? Is the comic moving away from monster movies to dada?

"a 46cm long claw (chelicera)"
um shouldn't that actually read either "pedipalp" or "chelaes [sic]"?

You wish.

The pedipalps of pterygotid eurypterids look very different, because they are just the first pair of walking legs. They are much smaller than the chelicerae.

Incidentally, if you follow the link, you will see that the claw is just the last segment of the chelicera. Oh man. :-o

So I can already hear the creationist argument here; these aren't really a new species, they're just scorpions that, because they lived in God's perfect Eden-world, hadn't yet been introduced to parasites; and the oxygen-rich environment of the time enabled these scorpions to keep growing and growing, so technically, these aren't a different species, they just responded differently to the environment of the time.

Wait a little. The eurypterids are so different from real scorpions that for a long time they were thought to be more closely related to the horseshoe "crabs". (They lack a sting, for example.) And like scorpions and horseshoe crabs and spiders, they are chelicerates, not crustaceans.

Animals that never stop growing usually grow more and more slowly with age. Vertebrates anyway. Do lobsters follow that pattern?

By David Marjanović, OM (not verified) on 21 Nov 2007 #permalink

They lack a sting, for example.

Which proves the point. In the prelapsarian world they would have no need for a sting. This developed later when Adam's sin forced them to become predators.

Don't ask how. Maybe God fashioned them out of the discarded legs of serpents.

By noncarborundum (not verified) on 21 Nov 2007 #permalink

It's really hard for them to hide in your hiking boot.

This may be the long-sought explanation for the disappearance of the giants recorded in Genesis (6:4: "There were giants in the earth in those days"). Their boots were just the right size for monster scorpions to hide in.

By noncarborundum (not verified) on 21 Nov 2007 #permalink

Real scorpions, complete with sting as far as I know, are known from the Silurian onwards...

But of course that doesn't matter. No YEC could tell a Silurian formation from a Miocene one.

By David Marjanović, OM (not verified) on 21 Nov 2007 #permalink

Sounds like a creature for Beowulf to take on lol

From After The Bar Closes:
link

You wish.

The pedipalps of pterygotid eurypterids look very different, because they are just the first pair of walking legs. They are much smaller than the chelicerae.

I stand corrected, but at least I did not call them "mandibles" like in a few other new transcripts I found, especially some German news sources were rather vague on that topic ( oh woe, when will we finally begin to use more scientific and less colloquial terms?)

Does anyone know what the whole beastie looked like?
Would it be safe to assume that it looked like Pterygotus buffaloensis but with nastier claws?

"It's too bad they've all been dead for 390 million years."

PZ-- You must not scuba dive. Just the thought of running into these giant arthropods underwater is freaking me out...

By metricdiver (not verified) on 21 Nov 2007 #permalink

Thanks Zarquon

That photo gave me the creeps. The chappie does have a nice bum though.

By Bride of Shrek (not verified) on 21 Nov 2007 #permalink

Yay Eurypterids! My favorite fossil. I'm trying to figure out a way to get access to the old Bennett Quarry in Buffalo where a lot of the world's museum collection of eurypterids came from.

Some may think cephalopods are pretty, but for sheer beauty nothing can top this baby:
http://www.paleoclones.com/images/fossils/large/580.jpg

I am with you Mooser, my first thought was of The Dancers too. I also agree that the Lat are a complete hoot. Of course they find mutual Nirvana with Mistress Christia, so it all ends happily.

By Peter Ashby (not verified) on 21 Nov 2007 #permalink

No, I think it is more closely related to the lobstrosity.

Posted by: fnord prefect

I also thought of Steven King's mutant giant lobsters.

So did Noah had 2 of these also in his Ark?

The best thing about 8-foot-long scorpions:

It's really hard for them to hide in your hiking boot.

Unfortunately, it's really easy for your hiking boots to hide in an 8-foot-long scorpion.

The best thing about 8-foot-long scorpions:
It's really hard for them to hide in your hiking boot.

Unfortunately, it's really easy for your hiking boots to hide in an 8-foot-long scorpion.

That's only if the aforementioned scorpion has already disposed of and or digested the previous owner of the boots.

While this guy lived during rhe Devonian period. Eurypterids
died out about 250 mya during the end Permian event.

New Scientist's website had this story under the headline:
"Giant claw points to monster sea scorpion".

I felt totally gypped when I found out it was only a fossil.

By Ian Gould (not verified) on 22 Nov 2007 #permalink

One of the Discovery shows about before the dinosaurs had a 3 ft-long scorpion molting sitting on a rock out in the air. I doubt that an arthropod of that size could successfully molt out in the air rather than in water.

By Jim Thomerson (not verified) on 25 Nov 2007 #permalink

ok, I admit it. The first thing I thought of when I saw that fossile was "Wow, Dr Who was right!" (particularly when thinking about the Tom Baker series)

Then, of course, came the 1950's "Monster is a shadow on the screen so you can't see that it's only a stuffed toy" set of movies. I know there was at least one that was Mistified wherein the monster was a shadow lobster. From Mars, I think.

Still.. can you imagine the luau you could throw with one of these as.. um... guest of honor?

A 46 cm long chelicera... that's a bit longer than this Mac keyboard is broad, and that's just a chelicera... :-o

That beast wouldn't fit through the door of this room!

I smell a Jurassic Park ripoff coming.

By David Marjanović (not verified) on 21 Nov 2007 #permalink

"a 46cm long claw (chelicera)"
um shouldn't that actually read either "pedipalp" or "chelaes [sic]"?

You wish.

The pedipalps of pterygotid eurypterids look very different, because they are just the first pair of walking legs. They are much smaller than the chelicerae.

Incidentally, if you follow the link, you will see that the claw is just the last segment of the chelicera. Oh man. :-o

So I can already hear the creationist argument here; these aren't really a new species, they're just scorpions that, because they lived in God's perfect Eden-world, hadn't yet been introduced to parasites; and the oxygen-rich environment of the time enabled these scorpions to keep growing and growing, so technically, these aren't a different species, they just responded differently to the environment of the time.

Wait a little. The eurypterids are so different from real scorpions that for a long time they were thought to be more closely related to the horseshoe "crabs". (They lack a sting, for example.) And like scorpions and horseshoe crabs and spiders, they are chelicerates, not crustaceans.

Animals that never stop growing usually grow more and more slowly with age. Vertebrates anyway. Do lobsters follow that pattern?

By David Marjanović, OM (not verified) on 21 Nov 2007 #permalink

Real scorpions, complete with sting as far as I know, are known from the Silurian onwards...

But of course that doesn't matter. No YEC could tell a Silurian formation from a Miocene one.

By David Marjanović, OM (not verified) on 21 Nov 2007 #permalink