Spider fossil sheds light on Australia’s ancient rainforest ecosystem

A suite of plant and animal fossils from a site in New South Wales date back about 16 million years to a time when the region was blanketed in lush rainforests

Life 7 January 2022

By Chen Ly

Image of a mygalomorph spider

Fossil of a mygalomorph spider from the McGraths Flat, Australia

Michael Frese

An immaculately preserved fossil of a mygalomorph spider (Mygalomorphae) has been uncovered by researchers excavating at the McGraths Flat, a fossil site in New South Wales, Australia. The 4-centimetre-long spider (pictured above) lived some 11 million to 16 million years ago when the area was dominated by rainforest.

“It’s unlike anything that we have seen alive today in Australia,” says co-author Matthew McCurry at the Australian Museum Research Institute in Sydney. “One of the characteristics that’s quite different is the size of this first set of legs – it’s an extremely large spider.”

A suite of equally well-preserved fossils of plants, insects and vertebrates were found at the McGraths Flat site, giving researchers an unprecedented insight into what Australia would have looked like during the Miocene Epoch.

“These are sites that preserve even soft tissue structures inside the specimens,” says co-author Michael Frese at the University of Canberra.

By analysing the properties of several leaf fossils from the site, McCurry, Frese and their colleagues reconstructed the region’s past climate using a computer model. The mean annual temperature of the area was estimated to have been around 17°C. They also found that during the three wettest and driest months of the year, rainfall was around 962 millimetres and 254 mm per month, respectively.

Additionally, the researchers found evidence of interactions between organisms. For example, they discovered a freshwater mussel attached to the fin of a fish, which means the mussel used the fish to move around and feed. They also discovered a microscopic, parasitic nematode that appears to have hitched a ride on the back of a longhorn beetle.

“The degree of fossilisation allows us this unprecedented insight into what these ancient rainforest ecosystems were like,” says McCurry.

This site also closes a gap in the knowledge of Australia’s prehistoric past, says Frese. “We had no fossil site that would give us information on the Miocene in Australia, which is an important time period.”

“It’s a time when Australia was becoming far more arid and when most of its modern ecosystems were developed,” says McCurry. “It’s Australia’s origin story, in a way.”

Journal reference: Science Advances, DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.abm1406

Sign up to Wild Wild Life, a free monthly newsletter celebrating the diversity and science of animals, plants and Earth’s other weird and wonderful inhabitants

More on these topics:

Note: This article have been indexed to our site. We do not claim legitimacy, ownership or copyright of any of the content above. To see the article at original source Click Here

Related Posts
Best MacBook: Which Apple laptop should you buy? thumbnail

Best MacBook: Which Apple laptop should you buy?

You’re planning on buying a new Mac laptop. So you head over to your local Apple store, or you peruse the pages of Apple’s website, and you find yourself with money to spend but no idea on which MacBook to buy. Don’t worry! That’s why we’re here. In this guide, we’ll go over Apple’s current…
Read More
Winds in Jupiter’s Great Red Spot Are Speeding Up thumbnail

Winds in Jupiter’s Great Red Spot Are Speeding Up

In Jupiter’s Great Red Spot, a storm that has been roiling for centuries, its “outer lane” is moving faster than its “inner lane” — and continues to pick up speed. By analysing long-term data from this high-speed ring, researchers have found that the wind speed has increased by up to 8 percent between 2009 and…
Read More
Ancient 'urine flasks' for smelling (and tasting) pee uncovered in trash dump at Caesar's forum in Rome thumbnail

Ancient ‘urine flasks’ for smelling (and tasting) pee uncovered in trash dump at Caesar’s forum in Rome

Plates recovered from Ospedale dei Fornari dump. (Image credit: Sovrintendenza Capitolina — The Caesar's Forum Project) A Renaissance-era trash dump discovered inside the Forum of Caesar in Rome is brimming with old medical supplies, including 500-year-old medicine bottles and urine flasks — containers used to collect patients' pee for medical analysis, a new study finds. Initially
Read More
In 2022, NASA will launch four new space missions to explore Earth thumbnail

In 2022, NASA will launch four new space missions to explore Earth

המשימות הן TROPICS, EMIT, JPSS ו-SWOT. כל אחת מהן מציעה משהו ייחודי ומוסיפה דרך חדשה להבין את ביתנו ולהגן עליו הלוויין SWOT מחובר לפלטפורמה במרכז של Thales Alenia Space בקאן. קרדיט: Emmanuel Briot (Wikimedia Commons) החלל החיצון הוא מקום נהדר להגיע אליו אם רוצים לחקור את כדור הארץ. למרות שכלי חלל שמסתכלים החוצה כמו האבל…
Read More
Index Of News
Total
0
Share