Undergrad Thesis Collection 2019

Every year, the Trinity College Dublin Zoology, Botany, and Environmental Science moderatorship students (final year undergraduates) complete their own research projects related to their course. It has been my absolute privilege to spend time with these talented students and to watch their projects take shape. I am blown away by the dedication they show, the incredible topics they cover, and the way in which they approach their investigations. After their theses are submitted, the students hold a poster session where they present their work. From beetles to beer and back again, this year’s students have done impressive and solid work. I hope all our readers enjoy learning about these projects as much as I did! If you’d like to contact any of these students to congratulate them, offer them prizes/jobs, or learn more about their projects, most of them have included contact information. Without further ado, I’ll let them take it away!
-Maureen Williams, PhD Student, Zoology

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Sex on the beach?

Mr Garrison taught  South Park Elementary children (season 10, episode 12) the good old fashion way of seeing evolution; “we are the retarded children of some retarded frog-fish-squirrel…”. This is the gradualist way of seeing evolutionary processes; leading from uninteresting jelly fishes to the mighty Arnold Shwarzenegger.

Many scientists reject this gradualist view in favour of Darwin’s idea that “there is no innate tendency leading to progress in evolution”. But do they really gave up this idea? A few gradualistic events in the history of life remains firmly accepted such as how the vertebrates went out of the water. . This theory refers to  fossil evidence from the Late Devonian period (that’s about 350 million years ago), suggesting that early tetrapods used their legs to go out of the water and conquer the brave new terrestrial world.

However, during this last decade, many paleontologists (yes, they don’t just look  for dinos) pointed out some disturbing facts: the early tetrapods, such as the iconic Ichthyostega, were in fact not able to walk out of the water at all ! So why the hell did they develop legs?

This question is an example of my favourite part of macroevolution: exaptations (when the function of a trait shifts during evolution). The French palaeontologist, S. Steyer, pointed out that early legs may have been used in many way before being useful to Usain Bolt: for swimming, for hunting (used to hold onto the seabed) or even… for sex ! S. Steyer suggested that legs could have been used to grab the female during sexy time as frogs  do today.

Other interesting aspects of this  gradual transition from water to land are the timing and the possible reasons why  early tetrapods left the water to go conquer the new terrestrial world – which was not new at all by the way; arthropods had ventured out of the water since the early Devonian. Recent tracks discovered in Poland suggest that a 50cm long “retarded fish-frog” walked on the beach in the Early-Middle Devonian, that’s 20 million years before Mr. Ichthyostega was groping his lovely wife. Niedzwiedzki and his team interpreted these tracks (and some other “younger” ones like the Irish Valentia Island trackway) as belonging to some tetrapods that eventually went out of the sea to scavenge  on the beach on low tide.

So was there really a graduale evolution from water to land in vertebrates? Who really made these tracks if it wasn’t Ichthyostega who  actually just “walked ” like a walrus?  Even though legs probably didn’t evolve for walking, some tetrapods may have thought that it would be fun to go on the beach for a walk and get yummy carcasses. Were their other tetrapod colleagues  using their legs for less adventurous but still cool purposes such as the possibilities listed above? As an answer to these questions, let’s just say that it’s complicated and it takes more than one big step on the shore to go from the “retarded fish-frogs”…

 

Author

Thomas Guillerme: thom.g[at]free.fr

Photo credit

South Park – season 10, episode 12