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17 million year old sperm bigger than the creature it came from is imaged at the ESRF
15-05-2014
Giant sperm from a 17 million year old fossilised shrimp has been imaged at the European Synchrotron, the ESRF. An international team of scientists has revealed that the fossilised sperm – the oldest known specimen of its kind - is bigger than the creature it came from. Furthermore the advanced X-ray techniques at the ESRF have shown that the shrimp’s reproduction process is the same now as it was millions of years ago. The results appear in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B. (14 May 2014).
The fossilised sperm came from a tiny freshwater shrimp, or crustacean, known as an ostracod. It was found at the Riversleigh World Heritage Fossil Site in Australia. The remote area in Queensland is well known as a rich source of fossils but this has surprised even very experienced excavators of the site:
“The discovery of fossil sperm, complete with sperm nuclei, was totally unexpected. It now makes us wonder what other types of extraordinary preservation await discovery in these deposits”, said Professor Mike Archer, from the University of New South Wales (UNSW).
The fossils were originally collected by UNSW in 1988 and analysed at La Trobe University where ostracod researchers discovered that the fossils contained fossilised soft tissues. These were then examined by both the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich in Germany, and by Dr Paul Tafforeau at the ESRF.
The team used both micro-tomography techniques on beamline ID19 and nanotomography on beamline ID22NI and studied a total of 66 ostracod fossils.
“Using these methods, we can reconstruct the morphology of the fossil giant sperm cells in three dimensions,” said lead author of the study Dr. Renate Matzke-Karasz from the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich.
Peter Cloetens from the ESRF who is also named on the paper, added:
"The fossils being exceptionally well preserved, the reproductive organs of the ostracods could be studied in great detail by nanotomography at the ESRF. For the first time we could go down to the level of the cell nucleus. We combined the exceptional phase contrast possibilities of two instruments at the ESRF, visualising first the complete fossil on one instrument and then zooming with record resolution into the reproductive organs".
Using nanotomography techniques at the ESRF the nucleus of each sperm cell can be seen.
In this cross section the nuclei are seen as black dots inside each of the circles.
Credit: Renate Matzke-Karasz.
Within the sexual organs of the ostracods are the almost perfectly preserved giant sperm cells, and within them, the nuclei that once contained the animals’ chromosomes and DNA. The sperm is thought to have be longer than the male’s entire body but tightly coiled up inside the sexual organs of the fossilised freshwater crustaceans.
3-D reconstructions also show that shape and size and reproductive physiology in these organisms have remained virtually unchanged for millions of years. “This suggests that their mode of reproduction represents a functionally successful model,” says Matzke-Karasz.
A specimen of the modern Australian ostracod species Newnhamia fenestrata with the right valve removed.
Credit: Renate Matzke-Karasz
The exceptional preservation of the sperm is believed to be due to bat droppings in the cave in which they were found.
“About 17 million years ago, Bitesantennary Site was a cave in the middle of a vast biologically diverse rainforest. Tiny ostracods thrived in a pool of water in the cave that was continually enriched by the droppings of thousands of bats,” says Professor Archer.
UNSW’s Associate Professor Suzanne Hand, who is a specialist in extinct bats and their ecological role in Riversleigh’s ancient environments, says the bats could have played a role in the extraordinary preservation of the ostracod sperm cells. The steady rain of droppings from thousands of bats in the cave would have led to high levels of phosphorous in the water, which could have aided mineralisation of the soft tissues.
Artists impression of the Bitesantennary site at Riversleigh in Australia as it might have looked 17 million years ago.
Credit: Dorothy Dunphy
The paper in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B can be found here.
For further details and science contacts please see the press release from the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich and from the University of New South Wales.
For more details on the ESRF beamlines used in the research see the following links:
ID22NI (Please note this beamline is now closed – information about the ID16A beamline that replaced it can be found in the following link).
ESRF media contact: Lucy Stone, Communications Manager, Tel: 0033 (0)476 882087. E-mail: lucy.stone@esrf.fr