By By
Tanya Lewis, Staff WriterJuly 8, 2014 10:44 PM
Sam Ciurca, who collected the sea scorpion specimens, with a life size model of one called Acutiramus. |
Gigantic sea
scorpions that lurked in the ocean more than 400 million years ago weren't as
scary as they sound, a new study suggests.
The massive
creatures, known as pterygotids, were the largest arthropods that
ever lived, growing to be up to 6.5 feet (2 meters) long, with claws measuring
up to about 2 feet (0.6 m). But contrary to what scientists thought, these
animals may not have been true top predators.
"These
things were almost certainly still predators of some kind, but the imagined
notion that they were swimming around terrorizing anything that looked edible
is probably an exaggeration," said Derek Briggs, a paleontologist at Yale
University in New Haven, Connecticut, and co-author of the new study, published
today (July 8) in the journal Biology Letters.
Pterygotids
were a type of eurypterid, an extinct type of sea scorpion related to
arachnids. These ocean-dwelling creatures lived between about 436 million to 402
million years ago, in the Silurian and Devonian periods, Briggs said.
Their closest living relatives are horseshoe crabs or modern sea scorpions, he
said.
Previously,
these spooky sea monsters were thought to be fearsome predators, devouring
armored fishes and giant cephalopods (related to modern squids and nautiluses).
Their compound eyes and large claws seemed to suggest as much.
But more
recently, a study revealed that pterygotid claws wouldn't have been
strong enough to break into armored fish or cephalopod shells.
A pterygotid fossil |
In the recent
study, Briggs and his team set out to examine the eyes of these ancient sea
scorpions, to determine whether they had good enough vision to be great
hunters.
Some of the
lenses in the creatures' eyes were big enough for researchers to see them
without any help from technology, but others had to be viewed under an electron
microscope. The team estimated the angle between the lenses and the size of the
lenses, comparing them with the eyes of a smaller eurypterid relative and of
modern arthropods.
Briggs and
his team concluded that the giant arthropods actually had poor
eyesight. They probably lived near the bottom of the sea and likely hunted
soft-bodied animals in dark waters or at night, Briggs said. But the fossil
evidence limits these interpretations, so it's hard to know for sure how the
animals behaved, he added.
After about
35 million years, pterygotids died out, and "it's a good thing they
did," Brigg said. "They wouldn't be good company."
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