Dinosaur Evolution Research Centre and International Centre of Future Science, Jilin University, Changchun, China; Department of Biology, University of Toronto Mississauga, Toronto, Canada.
Department of Biology, University of Toronto Mississauga, Toronto, Canada; Museum für Naturkunde, Leibniz-Institut für Evolutions-und Biodiversitätsforschung, Berlin, Germany.
Curr Biol. 2020 Jun 22;30(12):2374-2378.e4. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2020.04.026. Epub 2020 May 14.
Lateralized behaviors have been reported in a variety of extant vertebrates, including birds and reptiles [1-3] and non-human mammals [4-6]. However, evidence of lateralized behaviors in extinct vertebrates is rare, primarily because of the difficulty of identifying such behaviors with confidence in fossils. In rare instances, paleontologists can infer asymmetry in predatory or foraging behavior, including predation scars on trilobites [7], directionality of invertebrate traces [8], and even behavioral asymmetry in fossil non-human primates [9, 10]. Because lateralized behaviors have been linked to hemispheric (brain) lateralization in some vertebrates [11-15], evidence of lateralized behaviors in ancient vertebrates might yield clues about the evolutionary origins of vertebrate brain lateralization. Here, we show the earliest evidence of lateralized behavior in a fossil reptile based on repeatable observations of tooth wear in a large sample of intact jaws. The patterns of dental wear along the tooth rows of nearly one hundred jaws of the small, early Permian (289 million years ago) reptile Captorhinus aguti indicate that it exhibited lateralized behavior, preferring to feed using the right side of the jaw. Discovery of such a feeding behavior in this ancient, terrestrial, and omnivorous animal provides direct evidence of the deep history of directional behavior among amniotes and may indicate an early origin of brain lateralization.
侧化行为在各种现存的脊椎动物中都有报道,包括鸟类和爬行动物[1-3]以及非人类哺乳动物[4-6]。然而,在已灭绝的脊椎动物中,侧化行为的证据很少,主要是因为很难在化石中自信地识别这些行为。在极少数情况下,古生物学家可以推断出捕食或觅食行为的不对称性,包括三叶虫上的捕食痕迹[7]、无脊椎动物痕迹的方向性[8],甚至是化石中非人类灵长类动物的行为不对称性[9,10]。由于侧化行为与某些脊椎动物的半球(大脑)侧化有关[11-15],因此,古代脊椎动物中侧化行为的证据可能为脊椎动物大脑侧化的进化起源提供线索。在这里,我们基于对大量完整下颚中牙齿磨损的可重复观察,展示了一种化石爬行动物中最早的侧化行为证据。近百个 Captorhinus aguti 的小型、早二叠世(2.89 亿年前)爬行动物完整下颚的牙齿磨损模式表明,它表现出了侧化行为,更喜欢用下颚的右侧进行进食。在这种古老的、陆地的、杂食性动物中发现这种进食行为,为羊膜动物中定向行为的深厚历史提供了直接证据,并且可能表明大脑侧化的早期起源。