• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Two New Ancient Blood-Sucking “Vampires” Are Largest Of Their Kind Found Yet

October 31, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

Some 160 million years ago, no fish belly was safe from the scourge of blood-sucking vampire fish. Two freakishly large fossil lamprey species have been discovered in China that help explain how these peculiar sea beasts became some of the prime parasitic predators of the Jurrasic oceans.

Lampreys are primitive fish with an eel-like appearance that uses its sucker mouth to latch onto other fish, hence the nickname “vampire fish.” Most species have a complex lifecycle consisting of several stages. They start as blind filter-feeding larvae, often living in the silty beds of freshwater river margins. Eventually, they metamorphose into adult lampreys that bore into the flesh of other fish to suck their blood, acting as a parasite. 

Advertisement

There are around 40 species of lampreys living today and they’ve been around for a hell of a long time. The fossil record links them back to an ancient jawless fish ancestor that lived around 450 million years ago, meaning they’ve been on Earth longer than trees.

An illustration of the Jurassic lamprey.

An illustration of the Jurassic lamprey.

Image Credit: Heming Zhang

However, as only a few lamprey fossils have been discovered, many aspects of their evolutionary history are unclear, such as when they evolved their complex teeth. The two newly described specimens could help to fill in the gaps of knowledge. 

Their fossilized remains were discovered in an area known as the Yanliao Biota, an assembly of fossils preserved in northeastern China dating from the Middle to Late Jurassic (174 to 145 million years ago). These particular specimens were found at a layer that suggests they were alive 160 million years ago. 

The two new species are unusually large. Yanliaomyzon occisor, measures just over 60 centimeters (23 inches), while the other is slightly smaller and has been named Yanliaomyzon ingensdentes. The researchers noted the new species are around 10 times the length of the earliest known lampreys. 

These Jurassic lampreys have the most powerful ‘biting structures’ among known fossil lampreys

These Jurassic lampreys have the most powerful ‘biting structures’ among known fossil lampreys.

Image credit: Heming Zhang

The fossils feature beautifully preserved oral disks that represent the mouth. Crucially, the shape of these disks provides evidence that the lampreys had already evolved feeding structures that were perfect for chomping, indicating they were predatory by the Jurassic period.

The findings also imply modern lampreys originated in the Southern Hemisphere of the Late Cretaceous, as opposed to the Northern Hemisphere, because the fossils closely resemble the Southern Hemisphere’s pouched lamprey, which foreshadows the flesh-eating habit of modern lampreys.

“Together, fossil lampreys herein suggest that its group is not as conservative as previously thought, and the innovations of their feeding biology had probably underlain their evolutionary increase of the body size and the ‘modernization’ of their life-history mode during the Jurassic period,” the study authors write.

The study is published in Nature Communications.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Paris ramps up security as jihadist attacks trial starts
  2. Cricket-‘Western bloc’ has let Pakistan down, board chief says
  3. Ancient Bison Found In Permafrost Is So Well Preserved Scientists Want To Clone It
  4. Where Inside Us Do We Feel Love?

Source Link: Two New Ancient Blood-Sucking “Vampires” Are Largest Of Their Kind Found Yet

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Hippos Hung Around In Europe 80,000 Years Later Than We Thought
  • Officially Gone: Slender-Billed Curlew, Once-Widespread Migratory Bird, Declared Extinct By IUCN
  • Watch: Rare Footage Captures Freaky Faceless Cusk Eels Lurking On The Deep-Sea Floor
  • Watch This Funky Sea Pig Dancing Its Way Through The Deep Sea, Over 2,300 Meters Below The Surface
  • NASA Lets YouTuber Steve Mould Test His “Weird Chain Theory” In Space
  • The Oldest Stalagmite Ever Dated Was Found In Oklahoma Rocks, Dating Back 289 Million Years
  • 2024’s Great American Eclipse Made Some Birds Behave In Surprising Ways, But Not All Were Fooled
  • “Carter Catastrophe”: The Math Equation That Predicts The End Of Humanity
  • Why Is There No Nobel Prize For Mathematics?
  • These Are The Only Animals Known To Incubate Eggs In Their Stomachs And Give “Birth” Out Their Mouths
  • Constipated? This One Fruit Could Help, Says First-Ever Evidence-Led Diet Guidance
  • NGC 2775: This Galaxy Breaks The Rules Of “Galactic Evolution” And Baffles Astronomers
  • Meet The “Four-Eyed” Hirola, The World’s Most Endangered Antelope With Fewer Than 500 Left
  • The Bizarre 1997 Experiment That Made A Frog Levitate
  • There’s A Very Good Reason Why October 1582 On Your Phone Is Missing 10 Days
  • Skynet-1A: Military Spacecraft Launched 56 Years Ago Has Been Moved By Persons Unknown
  • There’s A Simple Solution To Helping Avoid Erectile Dysfunction (But You’re Not Going To Like It)
  • Interstellar Object 3I/ATLAS May Be 10 Billion Years Old, This Rare Spider Is Half-Female, Half-Male Split Down The Middle, And Much More This Week
  • Why Do Trains Not Have Seatbelts? It’s Probably Not What You Think
  • World’s Driest Hot Desert Just Burst Into A Rare And Fleeting Desert Bloom
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version