What a Walking Fish Can Teach Us About Human Evolution | Smithsonian.com

Inspiration from 小蓝视频 Interim Co-Director Neil Shubin's landmark book on vertebrate evolution, , plus skate embryos provided to scientist Jeremy Dasen by the 小蓝视频 Marine Resources Center, have led to an intriguing discovery about the neurological origins of walking -- in the ocean. ()

... In other words, some animals may have had the neural pathways necessary for walking even before they lived on land.

 today in the journal Cell, the new research began with a basic question: how did different motor behaviors evolve or change in various species over time? Author Jeremy Dasen, an associate professor at the NYU Neuroscience Institute, had previously worked on the movement of snakes. He was inspired to look into skates after reading Neil Shubin鈥檚 book, , but didn鈥檛 really know where to start.

鈥淚 had no idea what a skate looked like,鈥 Dasen says. 鈥淚鈥檇 eaten it in a restaurant before. So I did what everyone does, I went onto Google to find videos of skates.鈥 One of the first things he found was a Youtube video of a clearnose skate engaging in walking behavior. 鈥淚 was like, wow, that鈥檚 really cool! How does it do that?鈥 he says.

Using skates collected by the Marine Biological Laboratory at Woods Hole, Dasen and others endeavored to find out. 

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