Hunting strategy It has been inferred that
Acanthostega probably lived in shallow, weed-choked swamps, its legs apparently being adapted for these specific ecosystems. Apart from the presence of limbs, it was not adapted in any way for walking on land.
Jennifer A. Clack interprets this as showing that
Acanthostega was primarily an aquatic animal descended from fish which never left the sea, and the specializations of the tetrapod lineage were
exaptations. These features would later be useful for terrestrial life, even if they originated for a different purpose. During that period,
deciduous plants were flourishing and annually shedding leaves into the water, attracting small prey into warm oxygen-poor shallows which were difficult for larger
fish to swim in. Clack remarks on how the lower jaw of
Acanthostega shows a change from those fish that have two rows of teeth, with a large number of small teeth in the outer row, and two large fangs and some smaller teeth in the inner row. This difference likely corresponds to a shift in stem-tetrapods from feeding exclusively in the water to feeding with the head above water or on land.
Lifestyle While normally considered more
basal than
Ichthyostega, it is possible that
Acanthostega was actually more derived. Since
Acanthostega resembles juvenile
Ichthyostega and shows a lot less differences from juveniles to adults than the latter, it has been suggested that
Acanthostega might be descended from a
neotenic lineage. Although it appears to have spent its whole life in water, its humerus also exhibits traits that resemble those of later, fully terrestrial stem-tetrapods (the humerus in
Ichthyostega being somewhat derived from, and homologous with the pectoral and pelvic fin bones of earlier fishes). This could indicate that vertebrates evolved terrestrial traits earlier than previously assumed, and many times independently from another. Muscle scars on the forelimbs of
Acanthostega were similar to those of crown-tetrapods, suggesting that it evolved from an ancestor which had more terrestrial adaptations than itself.
Development A
histological study of
Acanthostega humeri, assisted by
synchrotron scans, indicates that the animal matured slowly. Some individuals reached sexual maturity (based on a fully ossified humerus) at more than six years of age, and adult fossils are much rarer than juveniles. Late ossification of the humerus supports a fully aquatic lifestyle for
Acanthostega. There is barely any correlation between humerus size and maturity, suggesting that there was significant size variation among individuals of the same age. This may be due to competitive pressures, differing adaptive strategies, or even
sexual dimorphism. However, the small sample size prevents recognition of a
bimodal distribution which could confirm the latter hypothesis. ==See also==