Fossil
Teeth Show Mammals Thrived Before Dinos Died
By Jennifer
Welsh
The
dinosaurs needed to go extinct for the mammals, and humans, to arise.
At least that's what researchers have been thinking for decades. But, a new
study indicates that at least one group ofancient mammals was already
expanding 20 million years before the dinosaurs were wiped from the Earth.
Analysis of ancient
mammal teeth indicates they were able to
take off not because dinosaur die-off made way for them, but because they
discovered a new food source that others weren't consuming.
Some of
the world's earliest mammals were the multituberculates, a group of small
rodentlike animals that first emerged on Earth about 165 million years ago. For
the next 80 million years, they stayed small, seeming to evolve slowly while
living in a limited number of habitats and eating insects. Researchers once
thought the animals were being held back by dinosaurs, which out-competed them
for food sources.
Tooth for thought
The fossil record shows that after the mass
extinction event 65 million years ago,
dinosaur diversity and density dropped and overall mammal diversity and density
increased. Researchers used to think that the mammals succeeded in the absence
of the dinosaurs.
To test
this theory, the researchers looked closely at a specific group of early
mammals. They analyzed 48 sets of fossilized teeth from multituberculates. The
teeth were scanned into a computer program, which analyzed their complexity.
"If
you look at the complexity of teeth, it will tell you information about the
diet," study researcherGregory Wilson, of the University of Washington,
said in a statement. "Multituberculates seem to be developing more cusps
on their back teeth, and the bladelike tooth at the front is becoming less
important as they develop these bumps [or cusps] to break down plant
material."
This increasing "dental complexity" allowed them
to eat a more diverse range of foods, including the
first flowering plants called angiosperms,
which started to appear 140 million years ago.
More mammals
The fossil teeth suggested that about 85 million years ago,
body size of these mammals increased and more and more new species appeared,
especially after they switched
to eating plants.
"These
mammals were able to radiate in terms of numbers of species, body size and
shapes of their teeth, which influenced what they ate," Wilson said.
This matches up with other mammal groups, including
recently discovered species from the Late Cretaceous (between 100 million and
65 million years ago) showing highly specialized adaptations and increasing
diversity.
The
multituberculates went extinct about 35 million years ago, but not before they
spread across the globe. It's been suggested that modern rodents and other
animals drove them to extinction because they were competing for the same food.
The
study was published today (March 14) in the journal Nature.
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