Why We Only Have Ten Toes (It's a Long Story)

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  • čas přidán 4. 07. 2024
  • Check out our podcast Eons: Mysteries of Deep Time: ow.ly/2J4450Iu69U
    Today, all mammals from humans to bats have five fingers or fewer. Yes, even whales, whose finger bones are hidden in their fins. Birds have four or fewer and amphibians get the best of both worlds, often having four digits on their “hands” and five on their “feet.” But no species of vertebrates have more than five digits, let alone eight!
    Thanks to these paleoartists for allowing us to use their incredible work in this episode!
    Julio Lacerda: / juliotheartist
    Fabrizio de Rossi: / artoffabricious
    Franz Anthony: franzanth.com/
    *****
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    Produced by Complexly for Digital Studios
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    References: docs.google.com/document/d/1a...

Komentáře • 1,9K

  • @eons
    @eons  Před 2 lety +1636

    Many of you have correctly pointed out that reptiles usually have five toes. Unless you're counting snakes, with no toes. So maybe it averages out? Regardless, sorry about that mix-up and thanks to those of you who sent us that correction!

    • @sahb8091
      @sahb8091 Před 2 lety +48

      Also, the extra digits on ichthyosaurs always fascinated me. Yes tetrapods settled on five as the ancestral condition for all living land vertebrates.

    • @paulwood290
      @paulwood290 Před 2 lety +2

      @@sahb8091 EA I

    • @romella_karmey
      @romella_karmey Před 2 lety +16

      Please cut the jokes part we all know it's awkwardly corny.

    • @romella_karmey
      @romella_karmey Před 2 lety +17

      I'd rather have facts trivia at the end of each episode...

    • @romella_karmey
      @romella_karmey Před 2 lety +9

      Like: Do you know that water is wet? Or.. Every 60 seconds in Africa, a minute passes... Lol just kidding corny as heck too 🥲🤣

  • @lauravansanten7804
    @lauravansanten7804 Před 2 lety +2127

    I really wonder: how is it possible that footprints fossilized eras ago, that have been exposed to the elements for who knows how long, are still preserved? I'd love an episode dedicated to trace fossils!

    • @Eleftheria_i_thanatos
      @Eleftheria_i_thanatos Před 2 lety +520

      Because they were mostly not exposed to the elements.

    • @nickmalachai2227
      @nickmalachai2227 Před 2 lety +317

      As an amateur's guess: raw statistical occurrence, luck, and paleontologists having learned very carefully how to look for them. Of all the footprints an animal makes in its life, taken over the thousands to millions of years that species/lineage could be around, ploriferating to incredible numbers, at least some of them will be covered up in such a way that the mud will dry up into s clear fossilized shape. Most of those fossils are effectively buried forever for us, lost as a grain of sand in a beach of searchable locations, but the few places we've learned hold these fossils (due to soil composition or access to ancient eons of earth) and experts in their fields have learned how to find them and how not to break them while excavating.

    • @nickmalachai2227
      @nickmalachai2227 Před 2 lety +129

      That said, yes, I would absolutely love an episode dedicated to how Trace fossils form and how they're found by paleontologists. I Dinosaurs and Funky Little Walking Fish as much as anyone else, but I wish paleontology as a form of study got more of a spotlight, because the little I've seen makes it look really really cool

    • @bigfunny6312
      @bigfunny6312 Před 2 lety +109

      I thought this was about to turn into a "dinosaurs aren't real" comment.
      I legit met a man who believed that.

    • @brianwnc8168
      @brianwnc8168 Před 2 lety +66

      Fossilized footprints are generally Footprints in mud that quickly get covered up by something like ocean floor sediments. Or they get covered up by something like a landslide or ash from a volcano eruption. They remain covered up for thousands or millions of years and then through natural plate tectonics, weather changes, and other factors, the fossilized footprints are exposed again for us to find. If they remain exposed to the elements, then they don't fossilize.

  • @Aptonoth
    @Aptonoth Před 2 lety +1393

    Wow I haven't been this early since the devonian period.

  • @HistoryScienceTheater
    @HistoryScienceTheater Před 2 lety +590

    Pandas basically have six fingers and I guess got around the whole, "the DNA that codes for how many fingers you have would mess a bunch of other stuff up if it mutated," by not really adding another finger. Its just a finger sized outcrop of bone, no joint involved. So they basically have 5 fingers and a hand stick.

    • @gaufrid1956
      @gaufrid1956 Před 2 lety +82

      Interestingly they also evolved from the omnivorous diet of their ancestors to a diet of bamboo only. Perhaps the "hand stick" has something to do with the diet modification. I'm certainly no expert though.

    • @HistoryScienceTheater
      @HistoryScienceTheater Před 2 lety +86

      @@gaufrid1956 from what I've been told its basically to help them hold bamboo. You can watch them eat and they use all six "fingers" to hold the stalk properly.

    • @tsopmocful1958
      @tsopmocful1958 Před 2 lety +28

      Perhaps all of this 'hand stick' accounts for why pandas don't breed as much as they maybe should. 😐

    • @HistoryScienceTheater
      @HistoryScienceTheater Před 2 lety +31

      @@tsopmocful1958 I dont see how that would affect pandas breeding

    • @zippy4star
      @zippy4star Před 2 lety +27

      and hedgehogs which have a modified wrist bone to create a sixth digit to improve burrowing.

  • @MortyMortyMorty
    @MortyMortyMorty Před 2 lety +1006

    Imagine if we had 8 fingers each hand then we would calculate everything in hexadecimal 😄

    • @Griexxt
      @Griexxt Před 2 lety +29

      Good point.

    • @bartelvandervelden9894
      @bartelvandervelden9894 Před 2 lety +46

      I doubt it, for the reason that we were also used to count to 60 with our two hands (the Sumerians started with it, things like a circle being 360 degrees is a relic of that time), yet we lost it over time to only using a decimal system

    • @Srothics
      @Srothics Před 2 lety +140

      @@bartelvandervelden9894 I think the point is that we only used a decimal system in the first place because we have 10 fingers. We don’t use base-60 or base-16 because they’re a lot less intuitive to count on your hands

    • @goldking12
      @goldking12 Před 2 lety +24

      @@Srothics there’s also the binary system of counting things, besides the decimal, hexadecimal, base-60 systems. But, you’re right, base-10 is our preferred methods because of its more intuitive to us.

    • @MigWith
      @MigWith Před 2 lety +27

      @@bartelvandervelden9894 sumerians counted using their finger folds

  • @conormcmullen6437
    @conormcmullen6437 Před 2 lety +332

    Pederpes looks exactly like Pederpes should look with a name like that. I love it.

    • @GeoffRogers42
      @GeoffRogers42 Před 2 lety +17

      I legit lolled much when that came up

    • @LivingParadox87
      @LivingParadox87 Před 2 lety +29

      “This thing looks kinda derpy… what are we gonna call it?”
      “Can you imagine if we called them ‘derpies’?!”
      “OMG! Well, the scientific community won’t accept that (even though there’s a bird called a booby, another bird called a tit, and a fish called ‘Boops Boops’), but maybe we can try to hide it ever so slightly. Only we will know ;) “
      Final name: Pederpes

    • @rasmusn.e.m1064
      @rasmusn.e.m1064 Před 2 lety +11

      Yeah, I smiled a lot at the name. I think it means something like "foot of Peter" though. Anyway, definitely naming my next Quagsire that.

    • @OatmealTheCrazy
      @OatmealTheCrazy Před 2 lety +1

      @@rasmusn.e.m1064 Peter means stone as well, so the well goes deeper

    • @allthelittleworms
      @allthelittleworms Před 2 lety

      pederpy

  • @Tfaonc
    @Tfaonc Před 2 lety +635

    Never have I ever thought to myself "what I really need here is an extra three fingers"
    A third arm and hand? Absolutely! But I struggle to see a scenario where fingers beyond five give an evolutionary advantage, but they are extra complexity which is a disadvantage.

    • @FelineOcelotLady
      @FelineOcelotLady Před 2 lety +69

      I completely agree! A few extra fingers wouldn't benefit me much, but I could go for a third or fourth arm!

    • @georgemurdock7670
      @georgemurdock7670 Před 2 lety +58

      More groceries you can carry at ones from car to door.

    • @IlmarcheseJacky
      @IlmarcheseJacky Před 2 lety +94

      You clearly have never played piano :D
      Another index finger would be awesome

    • @pluspiping
      @pluspiping Před 2 lety +49

      There's also playing guitar, doing crafts where you have to hold things down with your fingers, having more fingers to hold An Piece Of Tape when you're gearing up to tape the heck out of something... I still kinda agree - I do wish for an extra arm more frequently, but I do still regularly wish for more digits lol

    • @kamm6001
      @kamm6001 Před 2 lety +35

      having another thumb by your pinky would make it rather easy to open stuff like bottles with just one hand, so theres that lol

  • @BioniclesaurKing4t2
    @BioniclesaurKing4t2 Před 2 lety +13

    0:58 "…but no species of vertebrates have _more_ than five digits."
    Hemingway cats: "Please allow me to introduce myself…"

  • @Rationalific
    @Rationalific Před 2 lety +81

    Ironically, while it is supposed that whales won't gain legs again, we can point to them as an example of tetrapods gaining fins again.

    • @vaimantobe3034
      @vaimantobe3034 Před 2 lety +11

      Only sort of. These are in no way similar to the old fins. It's just a covergently evolved structure that functions as fins.
      It's still impossible to truly regain what was lost.

    • @adarshmohapatra5058
      @adarshmohapatra5058 Před 2 lety +21

      But note how they haven't regained their gills yet & still use lungs, despite being aquatic.

  • @AskMia411
    @AskMia411 Před 2 lety +542

    3:23, is it just me, or do the three fingers together here look like a proto-thumb with four other fingers???? Did those three fuse into one??? If so, that is AWESOME! If not, it could still show that an angled set of fingers plus four straight ish fingers was somehow ideal for these tetrapods , and that is FASCINATING!!!

    • @W333L
      @W333L Před 2 lety +86

      It’s very difficult for existing structures to fuse as opposed to duplicating or expanding upon a single structure. Losing extra fingers and reinforcing existing ones is a more feasible evolutionary path, which you will see if you look more into how genes tent to express morphologically. You also won’t see thumbs appear for hundreds of millions of years. I suppose anything is possible but it’s difficult to see this being a plausible bath of evolution

    • @TravisR1982
      @TravisR1982 Před 2 lety +29

      it's not just you; I had the same reaction the the 3+4 config.

    • @MelioraCogito
      @MelioraCogito Před 2 lety +14

      That thought occurred to me as well.

    • @seleuf
      @seleuf Před 2 lety +21

      @@W333L Don't we have tons of examples of structures fusing, both evolutionarily and developmentally? Aren't bird wings three fused dino fingers?

    • @W333L
      @W333L Před 2 lety +20

      @@seleuf think about the central claim. In all tetrapod derived groups we see each digit vary in shape, size, location etc. Your example is a great illustration of wrist and hand bones for example, where fusion and reorientation happens constantly among related species, though these bones rarely fuse into a single undivided structure. Bird wing skeletons have clear division clefts between each digit to form a structure that looks nothing like a paw or flipper, though each digit is a self contained bone that attaches to the other arm bones (we even see some digit deletions). What you don’t see, however, is two finger digits fusing into a thumb. We would have a clear division cleft at some point in the fossil record to explain this, and it’s simply astronomically easier for an organism to lose an unwanted digit through a deletion mutation or gene silencing rather than spend hundreds of thousands of years melding the bones into one.

  • @lilren2021
    @lilren2021 Před 2 lety +53

    Someone mentioned pandas, and I would love an episode on how one of the most fearsome carnivores on the planet eventually sprung a lineage that is strictly herbivorous.

    • @aaaaa359
      @aaaaa359 Před 2 lety +1

      The thing is, bears aren't carnivores.

    • @lilren2021
      @lilren2021 Před 2 lety +11

      @@aaaaa359 that I know but they’re in the order Carnivora. That’s what I was meaning.

    • @kray3883
      @kray3883 Před 11 měsíci

      They are just faking it! They eat parts of the bamboo that are super high protein and still have the digestive tract of carnivores.

    • @Meggypoo1983
      @Meggypoo1983 Před 10 měsíci +4

      The first bear (dawn bear) was believed to be omnivorous, I think. And then evolved and diverged into mostly omnivores, with carnivorous polar bears on one end of the spectrum and herbivorous panda bears on the other. So basically the fearsome carnivore aspect came later.

    • @shreyas077
      @shreyas077 Před 9 měsíci

      Totally irrelevant answer. "Religion".😂😂

  • @kelseyhaddix2403
    @kelseyhaddix2403 Před 2 lety +27

    Genes affecting digit development absolutely control other parts of development. I have congenital thumb hypoplasia, and also scoliosis. My daughter likely has the same gene mutation, she also has thumb hypoplasia, scoliosis, as well as radial dysplasia. She also had to be screened for heart and kidney deformities since they are common seen alongside these conditions

    • @kishirisu1268
      @kishirisu1268 Před 22 dny

      Such a generous person you are, you clearly knew about all problems but made a child, to make her suffer from the same health issues. Such logic if beyond any understanding.

  • @helmutzollner5496
    @helmutzollner5496 Před 2 lety +324

    Very interesting. About regaining more digits. There is sixfingered dwarfism. That leads to diminutitive growth and other health issues. So the hypothesis of the gene being used for more than one purpose rings true.

    • @rickglorie
      @rickglorie Před 2 lety +20

      I was wondering, are those 6 fingers fully functional? Are the just as strong and gripping as 5 fingers? I imagine that it's not only the existance of the digit, the true power of the hand is in the arm, the muscles pulling on the tendons to make me type this.

    • @Fr00stee
      @Fr00stee Před 2 lety +37

      @@rickglorie I know there is a family where every single person has 6 fully functional fingers on each hand

    • @fioafionawright8604
      @fioafionawright8604 Před 2 lety +13

      @@rickglorie “the true power of the hand” *avengers theme intensifies*

    • @just_radical
      @just_radical Před 2 lety +71

      The genes involved in having a sixth finger also control the likelihood the person will kill Inigo Montoya's father and need to prepare to die, thus explaining why it remains a rare trait.

    • @solalflechelles1216
      @solalflechelles1216 Před 2 lety +26

      It's no hypothesis: the gene regulatory network that produce digits in tetrapods is pretty well known and some of the genes involved, like Sonic hedgehog and the hox genes, play key roles in the developments of other organs, such as the central nervous system for Sonic hedgehog and the spine for hox.

  • @KellyClowers
    @KellyClowers Před 2 lety +105

    Well, ichthyosaurs went kinda crazy with hand/finger bones. Granted those were embedded in a flipper, not fingers

  • @MichaelJBurnsII
    @MichaelJBurnsII Před 2 lety +19

    My nephew is polydactyl. He has 6 fingers on each hand and 6 toes on each foot. The toes are well formed and fully functional. The extra pinky finger on each hand is more just floating there and should probably be removed surgically.

    • @mrvn000
      @mrvn000 Před 2 lety +4

      Does he climb walls??

    • @kalvinpratama4828
      @kalvinpratama4828 Před 2 lety +2

      I heard that polydactyl has dominant genes, so even if he get a surgery, his children might still be affected.

    • @Mackeson3
      @Mackeson3 Před 2 lety +4

      @@mrvn000 Probably not but no doubt as a child he had no problem learning his 6 times table 😉

    • @starstorm1267
      @starstorm1267 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Your nephew is Stanford Pines from Gravity Falls

    • @stephanpopp6210
      @stephanpopp6210 Před 7 měsíci +2

      In India they think that your nephew is extremely lucky.

  • @leahime
    @leahime Před 2 lety +9

    I don’t know if any will actually read this, but THANK YOU for respecting the audience’s intelligence in this video. Still concise and informative without being boring. Perfect middle ground.

  • @KimberlyGreen
    @KimberlyGreen Před 2 lety +190

    Seems to me that more digits would make for a wider surface area to use while paddling, but get in the way when trying to move on land.

    • @taxidermiedhuman1523
      @taxidermiedhuman1523 Před 2 lety +25

      Exactly what I was thinking, you only need those in the middle. Kind of like how horses and many other hoofed animals lost their digits.

    • @eliharper6616
      @eliharper6616 Před 2 lety +26

      @@taxidermiedhuman1523 fewer digits means more tensile strength per digit. Highly evolved diggers also lose digits in their hands

    • @barbiquearea
      @barbiquearea Před 2 lety +8

      I guess when it comes to land bound locomotion, fewer is better.

    • @-DeScruff
      @-DeScruff Před 2 lety +9

      Agreed. I would think being on land requires thicker stronger bones, so it may have been a fair tradeoff to make fewer but stronger bones.

    • @devilslamp7306
      @devilslamp7306 Před 2 lety +8

      Nah, they just kept getting messed up when they tried to count things. Eventually, they were simply unable to fall asleep while tending their sheep herds, and thus died out.

  • @barbiquearea
    @barbiquearea Před 2 lety +117

    I've heard somewhere that the reason certain species of fish from the Devonian such as Tiktaalik evolved limbs that allowed them to go on land was so they could escape from perusing predators. But overtime these fish and their descendants evolved to become more terrestrial. This was because insects were already abundant all over the land, so evolving to become land-bound opened up a new ecological niche for these prehistoric fish, as now they can hunt for insects that were already on land.

    • @left4twenty
      @left4twenty Před 2 lety +16

      the alternate earth of an arthropod, fungi and plant land life, where vertebrates just didn't bother, seems like a dope concept lol

    • @jackmack1061
      @jackmack1061 Před 2 lety +4

      do we know if tiktaalik generated an environmental change which suited early insects (eg perhaps by depositing concentrated food supplies on beaches?...)

    • @Dragrath1
      @Dragrath1 Před 2 lety +9

      Most of the stuff about early tetrapods is almost entirely speculation will very little evidence. In fact I remember reading an article which did a fairly comprehensive study of several of these early tetrapods which were sufficiently well preserved that their muscle scar attachments of skeletal digits sufficiently preserved to allow the muscles to be reconstructed and worse many of them lacked the spinal musculature to even crawl on land any better than a beached whale generally indicate the early tetrapods couldn't support their weight out of the water at all. Couple that with work showing they likely lacked the sensory apparatus to see effectively on land based on the shape of their eye sockets (though one of them ironically one of the earlier ones did have eyes that were probably adapted for land as they were positioned like a crocodile to see out of the water while submerged and its jaws left no doubt about what it was using those eyes to do. Still that was one of the fossils that would fare about as well as a beached whale on land so it was probably a pretty risky strategy dependent on its ability to drag prey back into the water in a sudden strike)
      It has been several years but I remember reading a fascinating article which looked at some changes in musculature which identifies several changes which seem to line up temporally with molecular clock estimates for a polypoidal hybridization event where the lobe finned fish genome in the tetrapod ancestor was effectively duplicated. Unfortunately I was only able to access that paper on campus via my University journal subscription so it would be hard to find again. Point is from what I have read the predator escape hypothesis doesn't seem very likely if they lack the skeletal and muscular strength to actually move or support their weight at all on land. Those papers seem to argue for a aquatic walking scenario with the terrestrial switch happening around the time of the full genome duplication event which seems to align with the Devonian extinction events. I'm not sure we can say what or why but it does seem plausible that tetrapods might not have been able to go on land without an evolutionary fluke.

    • @Josh729J
      @Josh729J Před 2 lety +3

      That makes sense considering most of the ones that couldnt make it back to the water died haha.

    • @norarivkis2513
      @norarivkis2513 Před 2 lety +5

      @@Dragrath1 The more recent information about Parmastega backs up the idea of water-walking tetrapods long before anything vertabrate actually got out of the water. It was a mostly cartilaginous tetrapod from earlier than tiktaalik; it was shore-dwelling instead of the later freshwater tetrapods, and it appears to have been an evolutionary dead end, but one which lived quite well for a while. It couldn't get out of the water, but it walked around in the shallows gathering washed up food just fine.

  • @stinew358
    @stinew358 Před 2 lety +4

    I don't want extra fingers I want extra arms

  • @macaryl95
    @macaryl95 Před 2 lety +3

    That fish is the reason I have to pay bills.

  • @hiccuphufflepuff176
    @hiccuphufflepuff176 Před 2 lety +272

    It's interesting to think how easily there could be an alternate timeline in which everything evolved much the same, but humans and other vertebrates all had 7 fingers on each hand. The worst thing about finding yourself there would be that you'd have to relearn simple math because people would most likely use a base-14 numbering system.

    • @LTWeezie
      @LTWeezie Před 2 lety +13

      Or in Hexadecimal

    • @Emily-ye1rj
      @Emily-ye1rj Před 2 lety +6

      There's actually a school house rock that's kinda about that

    • @sohopedeco
      @sohopedeco Před 2 lety +38

      Base 14 is not inherently worse than base 10, given 14 has the exact same amount of factors (1,2,7,14). Base 12, on the other had, has many more (1,2,3,4,6,12)

    • @l.zevicreations
      @l.zevicreations Před 2 lety +8

      @@sohopedeco yup! but we're just used to a base 10 numbering system so we can kost easily go in forms of 10
      (10,20,30,40 etc) where their numbering system would likely be different to compensate if that makes any sense?
      (sorry if this is slightly off context)

    • @Marixchatt
      @Marixchatt Před 2 lety +8

      @@l.zevicreations 12 would just be the next ten and would be easy just for whoever uses it just as 10 is for us

  • @b.rileyjowett6925
    @b.rileyjowett6925 Před 2 lety +176

    I think tetrapod anatomy and evolution is so fascinating, like I’ve spent hours just navigating through the phylogenetic tree of tetrapods on Wikipedia and then just obsessively researching some obscure lineage of ancient animals because I feel like it.

    • @jackmack1061
      @jackmack1061 Před 2 lety +8

      cool. nice way to nerd.

    • @patsysadowski1546
      @patsysadowski1546 Před 2 lety +13

      I’ve gone down some pretty random rabbit holes doing that too.

    • @kyptos2252
      @kyptos2252 Před 2 lety

      @@patsysadowski1546 this is the internet not field of cuddly bunnies

    • @quantumblauthor7300
      @quantumblauthor7300 Před 11 měsíci

      ​@@kyptos2252same thing if you squint

  • @qwerty_and_azerty
    @qwerty_and_azerty Před 2 lety +3

    6:51 I’ve been randomly attacked by cuteness!

  • @droopsmoop
    @droopsmoop Před 2 lety +4

    Ichthyosaurs are probably the few exceptions where a whole large clade had extreme polydactyly. Looking at their fins genuinely feels like you're looking at a corn cob, lots of finger segments and lots of fingers.

  • @DavidWillisSLS
    @DavidWillisSLS Před 2 lety +18

    0:53 “birds and reptiles have 4 or fewer”
    My bearded dragon chilling in his tank would like to disagree with you by offering you a crisp high-5

    • @iambiggus
      @iambiggus Před 2 lety +1

      Australians, always gotta be different.

    • @TragoudistrosMPH
      @TragoudistrosMPH Před 2 lety +1

      I don't remember lizards with 4 fingers...

  • @robhillen8007
    @robhillen8007 Před 2 lety +31

    All this talk about digits makes me want a video about how we evolved opposable thumbs. Talking about how we used to have more digits specifically makes me think about what the world would look like if we had more than one opposable thumb, either on the same or opposite side as the one we do have.

    • @ExtremeMadnessX
      @ExtremeMadnessX Před 2 lety +5

      Koalas basically have two thumbs on each hand.

    • @tarah._.
      @tarah._. Před rokem +1

      I think it is because our ancestors started using and or making tools more and more

  • @antonkovalenko364
    @antonkovalenko364 Před 2 lety +2

    As a guitarist an extra functional finger could occasionally come in handy. 😉

  • @MumboMod
    @MumboMod Před 2 lety +1

    Man, I love this channel, answering questions I've barely thought about :)

  • @like-a-limestone_cowboy
    @like-a-limestone_cowboy Před 2 lety +67

    Wow! This video came at a perfect time- we’ve been discussing this topic in my evolution course just this week

    • @ezpeasy3967
      @ezpeasy3967 Před 2 lety

      What come first Male or female

    • @roastedvegetables3737
      @roastedvegetables3737 Před 2 lety

      @@ezpeasy3967 the egg the chicken no wait I know what they're going to say they're going to try to tell you both like a hermaphrodite. Then they're going to say stop assuming genders. Then after that they are going to tell you stop using those terms male and female because it has the word male in it, then after that they're going to say don't use man or woman because woman has the word man in it.

  • @sahb8091
    @sahb8091 Před 2 lety +117

    I always found Ichthyosaurs to be interesting because they evolved six, or sometimes more, digits. Probably through the typical extra digit mutation. They are, of course, the exception.

    • @OddcessiveNooBurrito
      @OddcessiveNooBurrito Před 2 lety +3

      Ah, and also brilliant swimmers - perhaps there's some heft to the "' motion "on land" vs "in water" theory '"? Maybe given enough time, Aligators might gain a sixth digit? :')

    • @megapiglatin2574
      @megapiglatin2574 Před 2 lety +5

      @@OddcessiveNooBurrito Now, I wonder if the terrestrial part of crocodilian life still plays too much of an important role for that to happen though....
      Perhaps the cetaceans will gain extra digits spontaneously over time?

    • @UniDocs_Mahapushpa_Cyavana
      @UniDocs_Mahapushpa_Cyavana Před 2 lety +2

      @@OddcessiveNooBurrito It might just be that they had not evolved enough dexterity for more fingers to be redundent.

    • @caviramus0993
      @caviramus0993 Před 2 lety +1

      Moles also have an extra finger.

  • @janekschmidt9015
    @janekschmidt9015 Před 2 lety +4

    love this channel! pretty much every Video and for sure everyone of you hosts are awesome! keep up the great work

  • @dumupad3-da241
    @dumupad3-da241 Před rokem +4

    A bit clickbaity in retrospect - perhaps the title should have been '*When* we got ten toes' or '*How* we got ten toes', because the answer to the question 'why' was only addressed very briefly in a couple of sentences and was mostly 'we don't know'. But there were some interesting facts, so thanks anyway.

    • @garrettduell
      @garrettduell Před měsícem +2

      Looking at some of those tetrapods, It looks like digits were developed to help scoop at the ground and propel themselves forward on swampy land. So, the digits that are there are facing forward, and if you tried to fit 13 digits on a single hand, each digit/finger would have to be so thin to fit, and may be prone to breaking. So, thicker fingers are needed to support the weight, and trying to fit thicker digits on yhe front of the palm, meant you're maxed put at 4 or 5. Thats my best guess :-)

  • @Temtatork
    @Temtatork Před 2 lety +141

    Maybe having more than 5 fingers was pretty common in the past, but by just luck, the common ancestor of all living tetrapods had only 5 fingers and that triassic 7-6 digits reptile was the last decendant of a sister clade of 5+ finger tetrapods

    • @barbiquearea
      @barbiquearea Před 2 lety +22

      I guess if our common ancestor had four fingers, we would be like people from The Simpsons.

    • @artiefufkin88
      @artiefufkin88 Před 2 lety +4

      mmmm no.

    • @_vallee_5190
      @_vallee_5190 Před 2 lety +9

      I mean some people do have more then five fingers, people who have Polydactyly.

    • @jackmack1061
      @jackmack1061 Před 2 lety +3

      I don't know about that but I believe the polydactyl mutation is dominant in human heredity.

    • @Dragrath1
      @Dragrath1 Před 2 lety +3

      @@justforplaylists Yeah it would have had to have evolved all the reptile like traits independently I would instead based on the abundance of oddities in the Triassic be more willing to bet it might have been a polypoidal hybrid organism since all 4 of the polypoidal hybridization events recorded in the amniotic genome happen to line up with a major mass extinction event and stressed conditions in modern times have been linked to increased likelihood of polypoidal offspring being born.
      Its possible with two copies of the developmental genes that the expression of them could then be split to allow one copy to take over the brain and spinal functionalities and the other to take over limb development avoiding the deformities that tend to occur alongside digit duplication events.
      Or maybe some other gene or mutation countered those detrimental factors to make it ecologically viable to increase the number of digits?

  • @jackspencer5676
    @jackspencer5676 Před 2 lety +30

    I was amazingly lucky to study with Jenny Clack who was so instrumental in making some of these key discoveries. It is a period which never ceases to amaze me.

  • @JaybugJabbers
    @JaybugJabbers Před 2 lety +10

    Others have probably mentioned it, but I'm curious how Polydactylism plays into this.

  • @ltsgobrando
    @ltsgobrando Před 2 lety +4

    This seems like the perfect place to share this little nugget. My pupper was a genetic abomination! My Golden Pyrenees had polydactyly, he had six completely formed dewclaws: four up front and two in the rear!
    I miss my little sin against nature, but he's chasing butterflies in heaven 🥲❤
    Ps. Golden Pyrenees are guardian dogs, they laze around the house until there's something weird afoot. It could be anything... frankly it can be downright disconcerting sometimes. Once when I brought my pupper Zeus to my grandparents house. He was lazing about in the grass when out of nowhere he was off like a bat out of hell. He had spotted a hair a good 200 feet away and the chase was on. My grandma laughed and called out "good luck ya oaf!" She was absolutely speechless when he brought us back dinner 😆 (this was also six months before we put him down from old age)
    My other Pyrenees Xena often barks at "nothing"... as in every few hours... except it's never nothing. Sometimes its the neighbors working outside. They live a mile away. Sometimes it's an animal, the most legendary of which was an ermine (a small weasel). It was atleast a half mile away and I needed binoculars to see it 😂
    God I love my pups, always keepin their pack safe!

  • @IKEMENOsakaman
    @IKEMENOsakaman Před 2 lety +24

    I don't want to go to biology class tomorrow. I just want to keep learning from this channel!!!!!

    • @Weeewoooweeewoowee
      @Weeewoooweeewoowee Před 2 lety +5

      this is the problem with schooling.. if this interest you then you have an interest in biology but the class and test scoring system prevents student from simply enjoying new information for the sake of learning

  • @adlockhungry304
    @adlockhungry304 Před 2 lety +157

    Wouldn’t the larger number of digits be vestiges of being evolved from fins that would slowly disappear due to a lack of selective pressure for more digits than necessary? I think that’s one of those things I always assumed without really thinking about it.

    • @elizabethclaiborne6461
      @elizabethclaiborne6461 Před 2 lety +14

      No. Fins aren’t hands. Look up the fish skeleton, it has bones driving four limbs built out as fins, but more fins are controlled by just muscles. Fins are cartilage with skin stretched over them, think of them like your foot slipped into a scuba fin.
      The wiring and subroutines to use digits need to be accounted for - five, set up as two, two, one (opposing digit) comes from ancient claws and works well. Add a sixth and it gets ferociously complicated!

    • @adlockhungry304
      @adlockhungry304 Před 2 lety +5

      @@elizabethclaiborne6461, Hmmm. Well, I know they aren’t the same, but every depiction I have ever seen of the land vertebrate ancestor(s) has been a lungfish like creature with little, arm-like, stubs between its body and fins. Every text book I’ve looked at (granted that was decades ago) has described the transition from fully aquatic vertebrates to fully terrestrial vertebrates as involving air bladders evolving into lungs and fins evolving into limbs.
      If I’m wrong, and hands, feet, arms and legs did not evolve from fins, I must say I am positively mystified as to how we evolved such appendages and what from.

    • @ginnyjollykidd
      @ginnyjollykidd Před 2 lety +1

      Selective pressure is provided by the environment and actively selects the surviving traits. Selective pressure allowed five - digit-handed creatures to live on and pass their genes on while those with more digits could not use them efficiently to live to pass on their genes. The polydactal animals were selected against. That is how selective pressure works.
      Another example: amphibians come out on land, but they are still tied to water in order to lay and fertilize their jelly - like eggs. They cannot stay out of water their entire lives.
      Reptiles had developed the shell - enclosed egg, and when they ventured into land, they could stay there permanently because the eggs could fend off the drying effects of weather and still allow embryos to develop into offspring.
      Frogs cannot spawn on land. Selective pressure prevents them from living on land and spawning there. There was no selective pressure to keep reptiles like alligators spawning in water, though there is an advantage gained from returning to the water for some activities. But reptiles can lay eggs, eat and live in even the most arid of environments.

    • @joschafinger126
      @joschafinger126 Před 2 lety +1

      Outside a civilization where it's necessary to wear five-fingered, industrially produced gloves that stands for, at the very least, hundreds of thousands of years but doesn't invent the technology necessary to cut off supernumerary digits, what's the selection pressure that makes 5 the ideal number?
      Whale hind limbs became weak and useless due to a change in lifestyle; they disappeared because even vestigial hind limbs create extra drag relevant for survival.
      On the other hand, if a lineage that just so happened to have five fingers per hand/foot, rather than seven, four, or three, also had something else that gave them an advantage, the number 5 would be mostly preserved without any real pressure -unless a specific descendant lineage (horses...) developed into a very specific direction.

    • @Rudol_Zeppili
      @Rudol_Zeppili Před 2 lety +6

      @@adlockhungry304 limbs absolutely evolved from fins, they even use the same genes that fish use for fins. Since we are lobed finned fish our genes for our limbs should be more related to the genes in a coelacanth than in marlin or any other ray finned fish.

  • @katelynwhitwell6098
    @katelynwhitwell6098 Před 2 lety

    Woooooooo ! New episode !!! I absolutely love these ! So much ! Especially when they are about funky looking guys like these !

  • @Wbco22
    @Wbco22 Před 2 lety +1

    I’ll never stop smokin as long as y’all making theses videos

  • @LouisBertrandTech
    @LouisBertrandTech Před 2 lety +49

    Can you please do a video explaining the fossilisation process? For instance, how long do bones stay bones until the material turns to stone? Are recent discoveries fossils or are they just well preserved organic matter? How do paleontologists tell what rock to remove to reveal the fossil inside? That sort of thing. Thanks.

  • @Ninth_Penumbra
    @Ninth_Penumbra Před 2 lety +93

    There's one form (out of dozens) of Six-Fingered Polydactyly in humans (a fully functional duplication of the middle finger) which appears to be a genetically dominant trait. Perhaps having greater dexterity from more digits is advantagious trait in the modern human environment..?

    • @derianvandalsen
      @derianvandalsen Před 2 lety +34

      If I could quadruple flip someone off, I would be so happy

    • @SupersuMC
      @SupersuMC Před 2 lety +14

      Typing like a boss, I bet.

    • @leodorst5841
      @leodorst5841 Před 2 lety +15

      The Digital Era?

    • @ASLUHLUHCE
      @ASLUHLUHCE Před 2 lety +19

      Better keyboard and gaming input

    • @Ninth_Penumbra
      @Ninth_Penumbra Před 2 lety +21

      @@ASLUHLUHCE Play the F Chord on a guitar like a boss.

  • @geirvinje2556
    @geirvinje2556 Před rokem +1

    They didn't "trade" gills for lungs.
    Lungs are the swim bladder.
    Fish in Amazonas use this today.
    There are a tube from the mouth.
    These type of fish are eating other fishes that gets stuck when the water level get lower, and the oxygen in the water drop to a level that all other fish can't move, or die.

  • @andyhyde9208
    @andyhyde9208 Před 2 lety +1

    I've read that it has to do with weight distribution. Our bodies add a bone to each distal segment below each joint. An example : our legs: one femur, knee joint, two lower leg (tibia, fibula), ankle joint, 3 tarsals, chopart joint, 4 metatarsals, lisfranc joint, 5 phalanges. We all have 5 digits because we all follow this pattern. We don't have more digits because there is no advantage to locomotion by adding additional joint segments.

  • @stormcat3648
    @stormcat3648 Před 2 lety +27

    Another amazing Eons video. It’s incredible how you guys keep finding new interesting topics and then make both a well researched and engaging piece of content

  • @inserthere2118
    @inserthere2118 Před 2 lety +36

    Love your videos. I love to learn and the videos usually lead me to researching more about the subject on my own.

  • @davidg5898
    @davidg5898 Před 2 lety +2

    4:07 This should be qualified as "*most* quadrupeds" since camels and giraffes have that same gait when walking.

  • @TricaSpada
    @TricaSpada Před rokem +3

    My dog was born with 6 fingers on it's paws. I don't remember if it was the case both with front and back legs.. it was a double thumb, but the extra one looked like it was not well attached with the joint, although it looked perfectly fine. However due to possible complications or injuries we had them removed surgically. The thumb is of little use to dogs, so I don't think this mutation would have any benefits, but it's cool to know these things happen

  • @ginnyjollykidd
    @ginnyjollykidd Před 2 lety +9

    Once traits are lost, supposedly they don't come back.
    And yet, crabs reappear through the millions of years of life.

    • @KimberlyGreen
      @KimberlyGreen Před 2 lety +4

      Somewhere, Blake just let out a scream while thinking of coconut crabs.

    • @chriswatson7965
      @chriswatson7965 Před 2 lety +3

      That's what make crabs so unusual

    • @ZedaZ80
      @ZedaZ80 Před 2 lety +2

      There's a clause in that hypothesis: "except crabs, of course. Dang crabs."

  • @the_gaming_hyena
    @the_gaming_hyena Před 2 lety +44

    The Devonian is an amazing time period! Could you do a video on the ceratopsians? Don’t remember seeing an episode on those guys!

  • @HowDoIDad
    @HowDoIDad Před rokem

    This is my new favorite series and I love it.

  • @InfinityOrNone
    @InfinityOrNone Před 2 lety +3

    How do Hemingway cats figure into this, though? I've been told that they don't really seem to suffer the usual problems asociated with the polydactyl condition, but the most I've ever had in the way of explanation was that, and I quote, "they're a red herring," without any greater context.

  • @ryanmckenna2047
    @ryanmckenna2047 Před 2 lety +17

    Some cats are polydactyl which gives them 6 digits. From what I have heard they can be fully functional healthy digits at that.

    • @TheNightshadePrince
      @TheNightshadePrince Před 2 lety +1

      Do you have a twitter?

    • @SupersuMC
      @SupersuMC Před 2 lety +3

      There's also a dog breed that at its height was very polydactyl. Can't remember the name of it, but they used it to hunt puffins.

    • @Mackeson3
      @Mackeson3 Před 2 lety

      @@SupersuMC Norsk Lundehund

  • @Dogbreath42
    @Dogbreath42 Před 2 lety +32

    isnt having 6 digits on a hand a recessive gene in humans?

    • @alinaowen2635
      @alinaowen2635 Před 2 lety +8

      I thought polydactyly was actually a dominant trait

    • @derianvandalsen
      @derianvandalsen Před 2 lety +1

      @@alinaowen2635 I believe there are multiple variants. The Amish one, for example, is recessive iirc

    • @KenLinx
      @KenLinx Před 2 lety

      I read its dominant.

  • @namenamename390
    @namenamename390 Před 2 lety +2

    Imagine if we actually still had eight fingers per hand, we'd probably be counting in hexadecimal.

    • @AndrewTBP
      @AndrewTBP Před 2 lety

      Octal. Base 8 is octal.

    • @namenamename390
      @namenamename390 Před 2 lety

      @@AndrewTBP but we would have 16 fingers total, so hexadecimal.

  • @Lutefisk445
    @Lutefisk445 Před měsícem

    Those recreation images from at least the first half of the video makes them SO dirpy and i love them. I just wanna pick them up and gently squish them a lil bit

  • @RuYourBoat
    @RuYourBoat Před 2 lety +3

    @6:07 "Pederpes" describes that species very effectively. Derpy indeed!

  • @TheAnon26
    @TheAnon26 Před 2 lety +42

    Okay, but... polydactyly is a thing. If it messed up other systems, youd think it was way less common than it is...

    • @eliaskulp306
      @eliaskulp306 Před 2 lety +7

      Yeah, what about Hemingway's cats?

    • @certanmike
      @certanmike Před 2 lety +7

      I only hear about it in cats and when they said 5 or less I was like what about cats

    • @alchobum
      @alchobum Před 2 lety +2

      It's quite common in cats. They seem to do just fine and have no obvious problems.

    • @kaririedman3721
      @kaririedman3721 Před 2 lety +5

      Our polydactyl cat was the clumsiest cat I've ever known. He did have a couple health problems including something with the nerves in his back/back legs as he aged, no idea if it was related at all to the mitten feet

    • @TheAnon26
      @TheAnon26 Před 2 lety +2

      It happens in humans too, actually. ^^'

  • @retardationnation869
    @retardationnation869 Před 2 lety +4

    I knows it's a weird topic but I'd like to see an episode on how mammals transitioned away from cloacas.

  • @brfisher1123
    @brfisher1123 Před rokem +1

    Pederpes seems to be a close contender of being the last common ancestor to all living tetrapods from frogs to humans which is calculated to have live around 350 million years ago which is about the same time that pederpes lived!

  • @henrykrider179
    @henrykrider179 Před 2 lety +16

    I would imagine there's a certain amount of selective pressure towards more sturdy individual digits, since if you have a bunch of small digits with thin bones and are trying to walk on land, each digit would be at greater risk of serious damage like a bone fracture or getting severed, which by itself could seriously hinder movement (or require strategies for mitigating damage like we see in reptiles). Fewer, stronger digits would provide greater durability while still distributing pressure and providing sufficient dexterity. Two digits would be the minimum to provide balance on a single axis, three digits for two axes, and five is probably just the maximum typically needed for whatever use the animal has. Added complexity is also costly by itself, just to provide extra bones, joints, muscles, nerves, etc. and with the fact that it's hard to spontaneously gain lost traits as you explained, I'm not surprised we don't see extra digits today.
    In short, basically more digits = decreased durability/increased risk of damage, and gives diminishing returns on maneuverability/dexterity would be my theory on the downward selective pressure at play.

    • @fouchnickens
      @fouchnickens Před 2 lety +2

      Many years ago, I went on a tour of the prehistoric caves in France, and I very surprised to see the number of hand paintings that had six fingers -- the only people I know who have polydactyly are me and members of my family. Interestingly enough, polydactyly is a dominant trait on humans. Even with early intervention (removal of the sixth digit to ensure better hand development as the sixth finger relies heavily upon the fifth finger), polydactyly is becoming an oddity of genetics, much like left-handedness (which hovers at 10-12% globally -- BECAUSE SCISSORS ARE A DEATH TRAP FOR THE SOUTHPAW!!!).

  • @thienn5827
    @thienn5827 Před 2 lety +8

    Do a video on evolution of the eye

    • @AndrewTBP
      @AndrewTBP Před 2 lety

      Eyes have evolved many times. Be more specific. Cephalopod eyes, arthropod eyes, vertebrate eyes, which?

  • @thesharkormoriantm274
    @thesharkormoriantm274 Před 2 lety +6

    I have a question : Do all tetrapods belong to the same lineage and then some branches lost fingers?
    Or are there multiple lineages of four-legged vertebrates which evolved indepently, each one with a unique number of fingers?

  • @guyk537
    @guyk537 Před 11 měsíci +1

    I believe there is an important omission in this video that is only suggested at the end - that the genes that control 5 fingeredness are shared by other features, and one feature of particular importance: the reproductive system. People with polydactyly such as Bardet-Biedl syndrome tend to have reduced fertility with mutations to the internal reproductive organs in females. This is additional to other issues like congenital heart defects, but the problems with fertility might be the important factor that sustains 5 fingeredness in animals, because organisms with a mutation of different number of digits don't tend to produce offspring.

  • @barnettliu7824
    @barnettliu7824 Před 2 lety +3

    And then we all evolve into crabs

  • @erinkarp
    @erinkarp Před 2 lety +3

    As someone who does spec evo, these kinds of videos are so helpful!

    • @MM-jf1me
      @MM-jf1me Před rokem

      How does one "do" spec evo?

    • @erinkarp
      @erinkarp Před rokem

      @@MM-jf1me Making diagrams, art, and flowcharts for fictional evolutionary lineages.

  • @bip_bip_lechuga
    @bip_bip_lechuga Před 11 měsíci +1

    Just thinking this through a bit, it makes sense that mechanically 5 fingers allow for a sort of balance with slight redundancy and flexibility. I.e. if you start to tip left, you can begin to catch yourself with one or two, but if one fails you you have the other so as not to lose that ability altogether.
    Considering nutrients and the sort of laziness when it comes to genes, think blind translucent cave animals, while 7 might make just as much sense as 5, 5 is the minimum necessary for most semi complex movements. More require greater competence to manage and more nutrients to maintain.
    Three makes similar sense, and 4 is workable but lacks that center digit to balance things out, but anything more is overkill with the same potential downsides to each (odd versus even numbers of digits).
    I think that's a fairly decent reason. But like the video said, good luck testing it. Seeing this on one of those ai learning videos would be super interesting.

  • @zyxw2000
    @zyxw2000 Před 21 dnem

    Excellent! PBS Eons is an informative channel.

  • @cuva9203
    @cuva9203 Před 2 lety +18

    How did hooves turn to flipers for whales? And balleen teeth?

    • @chelsey8737
      @chelsey8737 Před 2 lety +3

      This would be so interesting!

    • @EmpressoftheLoneIslands
      @EmpressoftheLoneIslands Před 2 lety +2

      I also want these topics in upcoming videos.

    • @KellyClowers
      @KellyClowers Před 2 lety +4

      Whales seem to have totally lost their teeth before they evolved baleen (and baleen doesn't derive from the same tissue as teeth), probably they were suction feeding for a while

    • @KellyClowers
      @KellyClowers Před 2 lety +1

      Early land living cetaceans like Pakicetus didn't have hooves like a deer etc, even though it was an artiodactyl. But we see that with some other living ungulates, e.g. rhinos don't have hooves in the way deer do.

    • @ikebeckman1074
      @ikebeckman1074 Před 2 lety +1

      Pretty sure they have an episode called “when whales walked”

  • @fubytv731
    @fubytv731 Před 2 lety +6

    I'm loving her lethargic cadence.

  • @gramsay69
    @gramsay69 Před rokem +1

    Wow very interesting video 🔥can't wait for the simplified version

  • @victoriab.4742
    @victoriab.4742 Před 2 lety

    thank you for this beautiful and instructive piece of paleonthology 🤗❤

  • @enjarichards8100
    @enjarichards8100 Před 2 lety +24

    People who have the condition polydactyly have an extra finger on one or both hands or feet. It would be interesting to know if these people find it better with six fingers or worse, and why. This could give some insight into why the normal number does not go above 5, so if paleontologists who are studying this subject haven't consulted with polydactyls yet they probably should.

    • @blaidddrwg-ye9dy
      @blaidddrwg-ye9dy Před 2 lety +4

      Saw something on that. They generally have it better, if the extra digit is controllable.

    • @jakeweberzwier8655
      @jakeweberzwier8655 Před 2 lety

      Is the extra finger usable though?

  • @01Eldar
    @01Eldar Před 2 lety +8

    If we had evolved with a different number of digits, would our understanding of mathematics have developed "differently"?

    • @erraticonteuse
      @erraticonteuse Před 2 lety +5

      Hard to say. The Babylonians and the Phoenicians used a base 12 system despite only having 10 fingers.

    • @tompatterson1548
      @tompatterson1548 Před 2 lety +1

      @@erraticonteuse i thought it was base 360.

    • @rizizum
      @rizizum Před 2 lety +1

      We would simply be using a different base system

    • @erraticonteuse
      @erraticonteuse Před 2 lety +3

      @@tompatterson1548 OK Google says that it was actually base 60, which is also divisible by both 12 and 10. However the Egyptians did use base 12.

    • @AndrewTBP
      @AndrewTBP Před 2 lety +2

      So, short answer, no. We’ve settled on base 10 for arithmetic, but mathematics is much larger than your base system and arithmetic.

  • @Splagnate
    @Splagnate Před 2 lety +2

    It’s because if we had eleven we would look ridiculous

  • @cavecavecavecave5295
    @cavecavecavecave5295 Před rokem +1

    New fossil records sho that the only gloves available in this time period were for animals with 5 fingers. Mittens became available later.

  • @thedinosaurfiles5352
    @thedinosaurfiles5352 Před 2 lety +4

    Could you do an video on Spinosaurs and it’s family members in Evolution?

  • @The_Sass_Monster
    @The_Sass_Monster Před 2 lety +3

    I love this show especially the host. Please do a video on the split in our evolution once the dinosaurs became extinct

  • @curtiswfranks
    @curtiswfranks Před 2 lety +2

    I do not want extra fingers. However, an extra pair or two of arms (plus wrists, hands, and fingers like normal) would be lovely.

  • @strangequark3897
    @strangequark3897 Před rokem +2

    Michelle has come into their role as host seamlessly. Actually, I don't think Eons has ever had a bad host, and that includes guest hosts and former hosts.

  • @masonbee415
    @masonbee415 Před 2 lety +10

    I love your attitude and style. Very soothing while being informative

  • @naamadossantossilva4736
    @naamadossantossilva4736 Před 2 lety +3

    I want to see a video about how chordates beat cephalopods.

  • @brentu777
    @brentu777 Před 2 lety

    Great video!!!! Love new people on this channel

  • @SnowmanTF2
    @SnowmanTF2 Před 2 lety +1

    It seems like the benefits of one more finger would be pretty minimal, it could help spread load or swimming, but overall the difference seems pretty minimal. A thumb on both sides of fingers seems like would have way more possible uses than one or more fingers might offer.

  • @claudekingstan4084
    @claudekingstan4084 Před 2 lety +9

    Amazing. Can u explain why the different eye, hair, and skin colors? And did we have more in the past?

    • @KayKay114
      @KayKay114 Před 2 lety +11

      Because of the sun exposure. Some places it is more than others so thousands of years the melatonin changes to suit the environment.

  • @kevincraig9704
    @kevincraig9704 Před 2 lety +4

    It's kind of fun to hear "anytime soon" in a video about evolution. I assume she meant in the next few hundred million years.

  • @sebasinmortal
    @sebasinmortal Před 2 lety

    One interesting idea I read few years ago was, taking into account that we have evidence of footprints of a fully terrestrial teprapod that lived before the earliest semiacuatic tetrapods we know, it might be possible that Acanthostega and Ichtyostega were a lineage that went back to the water (retaining secondarily terrestrial traits instead of showing novelties to colonize land) therefore, terrestrial animals might appeared way back. Unfortunately that section of the carboniferous is quite poor to give any certainty.

  • @Dragonseye96
    @Dragonseye96 Před 2 lety +1

    I would like to see how you feel about the possibility of regressive genetic resurgence being responsible for polydactylism. While being extremely rare in humans it is comparatively common in cats and a few other species.

  • @beast_boy97
    @beast_boy97 Před 2 lety +9

    It's funny that you add bird songs to images of Devonian animals, considering they wouldn't exist for another 250 million years, give or take! But it did make me think about how quiet the earth must have been back then. Other than sounds of locomotion, I imagine insects and early amphibians weren't producing any sounds. Do we see evidence that they could have produced sounds like some modern amphibians can?

    • @Eloraurora
      @Eloraurora Před 2 lety +3

      Given cicadas, I wouldn't assume the insects were quiet in the Devonian. Modern insects make noise with assorted body parts that we didn't always recognize as noisemakers until fairly recently (e.g., how crickets chirp).

    • @beast_boy97
      @beast_boy97 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Eloraurora Oh true, I had honestly forgotten about cicadas and crickets...neither of those appear until the Triassic, but I suppose it's possible their predecessors could have made sounds.

  • @KippiExplainsStuff
    @KippiExplainsStuff Před 2 lety +6

    I really like Kallie's presentation. Somehow all the presenters in this show are great

  • @MonkeySimius
    @MonkeySimius Před 2 lety +1

    Having a second thumb on each hand would be really useful. Assuming we would never evolve a 6th digit converting the pinky finger into a thumb would work in a pinch.

  • @reuireuiop0
    @reuireuiop0 Před 2 lety +2

    Finally learning why we count to ten
    (And not eight, or sixteen which both would've made our counting system so much smarter and easier to put into 2 bit computer language)

  • @Infernoraptor
    @Infernoraptor Před 2 lety +2

    "There are no tetrapods with more than 5 digits." Um, what about the cats with polydactyly? Or does that not count for some reason?

    • @skippy9214
      @skippy9214 Před 2 lety +3

      That’s rare, so it’s not being included.

    • @KellyClowers
      @KellyClowers Před 2 lety +6

      It's a mutation, not a trait of the species

    • @AndrewTBP
      @AndrewTBP Před 2 lety +2

      It’s a developmental anomaly.

    • @KellyClowers
      @KellyClowers Před 2 lety

      @@phantomreaver85 still not a trait of the species. If six toed cats end up displacing 5 toed as the vast majority of the population, then we could talk

  • @diegog1853
    @diegog1853 Před 2 lety +15

    So given enough time... all vertebrates would eventually have only one finger like a horse? Since it is easier to loose them than to gain them back.
    Like imagine if most animals went extinct except for horses and they now have to fill all of the niches, would it be likely for additional fingers to develop or not?
    Very interesting.

    • @RavinRay
      @RavinRay Před 2 lety +14

      Not necessarily, at least for non-cursorial (running vertebrates). The multiple fingers of climbing vertebrates like primates serve that locomotory purpose very well. Now for the scenario you imagined, while it _could_ be possible to re-evolve multiple metacarpal/metatarsal and phalanges bones, it's also possible that other bones like the carpals and tarsals (wrist and ankles respectively) would then be used to take over this function. Something like the "extra" thumb of giant pandas which is actually a modified wrist bone.

    • @tsm688
      @tsm688 Před 2 lety +2

      Species that relied on them would keep them. A squirrel would have a hard time climbing without them. But the evolutionary pressure for fewer digits keeps them from proliferating pointlessly

  • @happyplace8452
    @happyplace8452 Před 2 lety

    I wonder if the polydactyl trait was in place of webbing, pulling itself through water and soupy mud would be made easier by the additional traction offered by the additional digits. I also wonder if the three separated from four formation of the hind limbs was a design for digging into the mud either for locomotive purposes, or maybe even displacing dirt and root for something akin to a den.

  • @KingDugan
    @KingDugan Před 2 lety +2

    I remember seeing a documentary on how fingers developed(I don't remember the name), but the genes responsible were named "Hedgehog" and "Sonic Hedgehog". I thought it was amusing that they decided to go with the video gave reference.

    • @AndrewTBP
      @AndrewTBP Před 2 lety

      Genes can have lots of funny names.

  • @Musketeer009
    @Musketeer009 Před 2 lety +4

    Interesting video. Could 'energy' be part of the reason for 'losing' digits? I.e. It cost the creature more in energy to grow 'unnecessary' digits and resulted in retaining 5 or fewer digits to do all the work required.

    • @gabrielapollard9684
      @gabrielapollard9684 Před 2 lety

      They probably wouldn’t be a high enough cost for it to be a selective pressure. It’s an interesting hypothesis tho!

    • @talideon
      @talideon Před 2 lety +3

      I recall some mathematical models I stumbled across a few years ago coming to the conclusion that between five and six was the lowest energy solution, and in that case, you're probably best rounding down.
      Take that with a grain of salt though: it was a few years ago, and I can't pull up any references.

  • @TheDigli
    @TheDigli Před 2 lety +5

    You improved a lot since your first episode 😄

  • @nashbellow5430
    @nashbellow5430 Před 2 lety +2

    one interesting thought is about how some people do have 6 fingers. Its rare, but you do see it as a dominant trait in certain countries

  • @Falahardo
    @Falahardo Před 2 lety

    Maybe the answer about the digits is the example you gave about icthyostega. The three fingers that were too close may have merged into one bigger thumblike finger as the independent movement of each one became obsolete.