Global warming shrank carnivores 55 million years ago
August 25th, 2010 - 4:40 pm ICT by ANIWashington, Aug 25 (ANI): Extinct carnivorous mammals shrank in size during a global warming event that occurred 55 million years ago, according to a new University of Florida study.
The study describes a new species that evolved to half the size of its ancestors during this period of global warming.
The hyena-like animal, Palaeonictis wingi, evolved from the size of a bear to the size of a coyote during a 200,000-year period when Earth’s average temperature increased about 15 degrees Fahrenheit.
Following this global warming event, Earth’s temperature cooled and the animal evolved to a larger size.
“We know that plant-eating mammals got smaller during the earliest Eocene when global warming occurred, possibly associated with elevated levels of carbon dioxide,” said lead author Stephen Chester, a Yale University doctoral student who began the research at UF with Jonathan Bloch, curator of vertebrate paleontology at the Florida Museum of Natural History.
“Surprisingly, this study shows that the same thing happened in some carnivores, suggesting that other factors may have played a critical role in their evolution.”
Researchers discovered a nearly complete jaw from the animal in Wyoming’s Big Horn Basin in 2006 during a fossil-collecting expedition, led by Bloch, a co-author on the study.
Bloch said the new findings could help scientists better understand the impact of current global warming.
“Documenting the impact of global climate change in the past is one of the only real experiments that can inform us about what the effects global warming might have on mammals in the near future,” said Bloch, who has studied this climate change event for nearly a decade.
Scientists think the Earth experienced increased levels of carbon dioxide and a drier environment during the warmer time period, but they do not completely understand what caused mammals to shrink.
One theory is that carbon dioxide levels reduced plant nutrients, causing herbivorous mammals to shrink. The newly described species primarily consumed meat, meaning plant nutrients couldn’t have been the only factor, Bloch said.
Mammals in warmer climates today tend to be smaller than mammals in colder climates, Chester said. For example, brown bears in Montana are generally smaller than those found in Alaska.
The study’s other authors are Ross Secord, assistant professor at the University of Nebraska, and Doug Boyer, assistant professor at Brooklyn College.
The study is scheduled to appear in the December print edition of the Journal of Mammalian Evolution. (ANI)
- Global warming threat to tropical rainforests exaggerated - Nov 14, 2010
- Drop in CO2 triggered polar ice sheet formation - Dec 02, 2011
- Tree plantation may not fight global warming - May 26, 2011
- Two thirds of permafrost likely to melt by 2200 - Feb 17, 2011
- Ancient fossils hold clues for predicting future climate change - Apr 09, 2011
- Aquatic ecosystems release more carbon than land - Jun 22, 2012
- Climate change making some animals thin, while some fat - Feb 10, 2010
- 66pc permafrost to melt by 2200, speed up global warming in coming years - Feb 17, 2011
- Climate changes will be rapid if warming continues - Dec 09, 2011
- Oceans absorbing half of greenhouse emission - Aug 02, 2012
- Earth will recover faster from global warming show prehistoric evidence - Apr 23, 2011
- Earth witnessed extreme global warming around 40mn yrs ago - Nov 11, 2010
- Stripping air of CO2 may become unavoidable - Jul 25, 2012
- Warming could unleash more violent storms, says study - Jul 11, 2012
- Bering Sea floor sheds light on last major global warming period - Jan 05, 2011
Tags: author stephen, average temperature, carbon dioxide levels, carnivores, carnivorous mammals, doctoral student, eocene, evolution researchers, florida museum of natural history, florida study, global climate change, global warming, horn basin, hyena, jonathan bloch, museum of natural history, plant nutrients, university of florida, vertebrate paleontology, yale university