The origin of all living vertebrates just got more mysterious.
Since the 1970s, many evolutionary biologists have considered an eel-like, deep sea-dwelling creature called the hagfish to be the closest extant relative of a last common ancestor for all backboned creatures.
That made the hagfish a stand-in for a transitional species between
Donoghue’s study, co-authored with Dartmouth College biologist Kevin Peterson and published October 19 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, is the latest in a series of attempts to arrange hagfish and lampreys in the tree of life.
Without hagfish, evolutionary biologists are left with a gap between complex invertebrates like








