Our jawed ancestors weren’t responsible for the demise of their jawless cousins as had been assumed according to new research from the University of Manchester.

Dr Robert Sansom believes rising sea levels are more likely to blame and his research has been published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B.

In this research, Dr Sansom, PhD student Emma Randle and Phil Donoghue from the University of Bristol studied the patterns of diversity of fossil jawless fish.

These boney fish with a tank like construction (ostracoderms) were dominant and diverse in ancient seas.

The team found that patterns of ostracoderm diversity were correlated with changing environmental and geological conditions; the fish were strongly reliant on the availability of shallow water seas and ecosystems.

Dr Samson says that:

“When our jawed vertebrate ancestors overtook their jawless relatives 400 million years ago, it seems that it might not have been through direct competition but instead the inability of our jawless cousins to adapt to changing environmental conditions.”

The findings also suggest the jawless fish could have existed earlier than previously thought.

Dr Sansom explains: “Understanding the relationship between biodiversity and changing conditions at this time reveals a long missing fossil record for our jawless cousins. It is possible that they could have radiated and evolved up to 20 million years before their first known occurrences as fossils.”

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