Back to the Sea

Back to the Sea

Wall Street optimists are predicting and hoping for the market to

show a V-shaped recovery from the lows after September 11.

After a disastrous round of golf last week, I plotted my few golf

scores for the year – almost a perfect V-shaped pattern. I started

with a very very high score, dropped to just a very high score,

then a sharp rise back to my original starting point. Fine for the

Dow Jones but not for golf. Why this tendency to return from

whence I”ve come?

You might ask the same question in nature. Why would

evolution produce a monumental example of a return to whence

life originated – the sea? Last week, I mentioned a little creature

resembling a mouse that was the size of a paper clip. This little

guy with mammalian features was scampering around with the

dinosaurs nearly 200 million years ago. Both the dinosaurs and

the little guy”s ancestors had pulled themselves out of the ocean

or lakes or ponds or other aquatic environments and learned to

enjoy the benefits of living their lives on land.

When the dinosaurs got knocked off by that errant asteroid or

whatever, the little mammals blossomed and all kinds of strange

creatures came into being. I would say we humans are the

strangest. Other species that developed after the dinosaur

extinction were the ungulates – animals with hoofs. Those early

ungulates were nothing particularly spectacular, four-footed

animals with tails. Certainly not the type of animal that you

would think to evolve into the largest animal the earth has ever

seen.

You may be saying that the largest animal is obviously the whale

and that it”s not likely that a hoofed animal like a pig could be the

ancestor of the whale. Ok, maybe not a pig, but now we”re really

beginning to pin down the “back-to-the-sea” saga of one big

mammal. It has been known for a long time that the whale once

was a landlubber like ourselves. I looked up whales in my 1962

World Book Encyclopedia and found that the article was written

by famed explorer Roy Chapman Andrews. Andrews cited his

own personal experience with a humpback whale and evidence

that the whale once walked on land. Normally, the vestigial legs

in whales are small bones that are hidden inside the whale”s

body. In this particular case the whale”s “legs” extended nearly

two feet outside the body.

While the evidence pointed to whales having a previous life on

land, the details remained a mystery until the last 10-15 years.

The situation has changed dramatically with the finding of fossils

of the whale”s early ancestors. An article by Douglas Chadwick

titled “Evolution of Whales” in November National Geographic

tells the story of this recent work. You wouldn”t recognize the

first whale. It was a spinoff of the ungulate family that obviously

had an interest in water. To me, the artist”s conception of this

fellow, known as Pakicetus, looks sort of like a weasel with an

oversize head and webbed hind feet. It lived around 50 million

years ago with our own ancestors, who were then primates about

the size of a squirrel.

Paki, as I”ll call it, certainly doesn”t look like a whale but

scientists are calling it just that. The reason is that certain

features of its skull are common to what we recognize as real

whales but these features are not found in other mammals. In

1994, in Pakistan, they found a fossil of a more fearsome guy

about the size of a sea lion with four webbed feet. You know it

came from ungulate heritage from the fact there was a hoof on

the end of each toe. It walked and swam around about 49 million

years ago and had a mouth full of teeth that you would definitely

want to avoid.

Skip along a mere ten million years and there are no more

walking-swimming whales. The front legs have evolved into

flippers and the back legs have disappeared or also turned into

flippers. Also, unlike the early walking-swimming whale, the

later whale no longer had to drink fresh water but could manage

in the salty ocean. In this relatively brief time geologically

speaking, the whale has become a true marine animal with many

changes in shape, becoming more streamlined with a shorter

neck and loss of features such as hip bones. This allowed the

spinal column to become flexible enough to power the incoming

tail flukes to drive this big animal. Whales also lost their outer

ears, with the lower jawbone sending sounds to the inner ear.

Finally, jump forward to 15 million years ago and you have

dolphins in the picture.

Jump again to today and you have blue whales 110 feet in length

and weighing over 300,000 pounds. How do whales differ from

their fishy companions? Being mammals, whales give birth to

live offspring, while fish lay eggs. It”s a good thing that whales

live in water with its buoyancy. Otherwise, it would be a bit of a

pain to carry and give birth to a 25-foot, 8-ton baby!

Unlike fish, whales are warm blooded and keep their constant

body temperature by growing thick layers of blubber; the colder

the oceans, the thicker the blubber. There are now two general

types of whales, the baleen whales and the toothed whales. The

really big whales are baleen whales, which swim around with

their mouths open and then force the water out through comb-

like structures that strain out the small stuff like shrimp upon

which the whale dines. The smaller toothed whales live on

larger fish or other prey in the sea. Dolphins are in the toothed

whale category and the really large dolphins are the killer

whales.

The toothed whales, such as the modern dolphins, have also

come up with what”s known as a melon. This structure sits in the

top of this toothed whale”s head and sends out sounds. When the

sound hits an object, the echo comes back and is detected in the

dolphin”s lower jaw. Thus the dolphin joins bats and other

species in using a form of radar eons before man came up with

the idea.

So, what”s the future for whales. Could it be the hippopotamus?

DNA studies show that indeed the hippo is the closest cousin to

the whale among us landlubbers. Norihiro Okada in Japan has

found shared markers in the genes of whales and hippos that he

maintains shows that they share the same ungulate ancestor.

Another article in the same Geographic by Mark Deeble and

Victoria Stone on life in Kenya”s Mzima Springs deals primarily

with the life of hippos in that area. The hippos essentially spent

all day lazing around in the three pools of this protected area of

Kenya. They get to work feeding themselves at night by grazing

on grasslands. The hippo”s daytime experience is like going to a

fancy spa. The treatment isn”t quite the same as a visit to

Georgette Klinger but it”s close. If you think I”m kidding, look at

that contented hippo with its mouth wide open while the fish

clean it out. According to the article, the hippos are so relaxed

during this treatment that they sometimes fall asleep! (I assume

they wake up in time to put their heads out of water and take a

breath.) The hippos also encourage the fish to clean up wounds

and other parts of their bodies. With amenities like this, I

wouldn”t be at all surprised if eventually the hippos evolve into a

more streamlined animal that lives mostly in the water.

So, the next time you go to the zoo, you might want to take a

closer look at the hippos. They could be a work in progress.

Allen F. Bortrum