Research explains why crocodiles have changed so little since the age of the dinosaurs
From The University of Bristol
January 7, 2021 -- New research by
scientists at the University of Bristol explains how a ‘stop-start’ pattern of
evolution, governed by environmental change, could explain why crocodiles have
changed so little since the age of the dinosaurs.
Crocodiles today look very similar to
ones from the Jurassic period some 200 million years ago. There are also very
few species alive today – just 25. Other animals such as lizards and birds have
achieved a diversity of many thousands of species in the same amount of time or
less.
Prehistory also saw types of crocodile
we don't see today, including giants as big as dinosaurs, plant-eaters, fast
runners and serpentine forms that lived in the sea.
In the new research, published today in
the journal Communications Biology, the scientists explain how
crocodiles follow a pattern of evolution known as 'punctuated equilibrium'.
The rate of their evolution is generally
slow, but occasionally they evolve more quickly because the environment has
changed. In particular, this new research suggests that their evolution speeds
up when the climate is warmer, and that their body size increases.
Lead author Dr Max Stockdale from the
University of Bristol’s School of Geographical Sciences, said: “Our analysis
used a machine learning algorithm to estimate rates of evolution. Evolutionary
rate is the amount of change that has taken place over a given amount of time,
which we can work out by comparing measurements from fossils and taking into
account how old they are.
“For our study we measured body size,
which is important because it interacts with how fast animals grow, how much
food they need, how big their populations are and how likely they are to become
extinct.”
The findings show that the limited
diversity of crocodiles and their apparent lack of evolution is a result of a
slow evolutionary rate. It seems the crocodiles arrived at a body plan that was
very efficient and versatile enough that they didn't need to change it in order
to survive.
This versatility could be one
explanation why crocodiles survived the meteor impact at the end of the Cretaceous
period, in which the dinosaurs perished. Crocodiles generally thrive better in
warm conditions because they cannot control their body temperature and require
warmth from the environment.
The climate during the age of dinosaurs
was warmer than it is today, and that may explain why there were many more
varieties of crocodile than we see now. Being able to draw energy from the sun
means they do not need to eat as much as a warm-blooded animal like a bird or a
mammal.
Dr Stockdale added: “It is fascinating
to see how intricate a relationship exists between the earth and the living
things we share it with. The crocodiles landed upon a lifestyle that was
versatile enough to adapt to the enormous environmental changes that have taken
place since the dinosaurs were around.”
The next step for the team’s research is
to find out why some types of prehistoric crocodile died out, while others
didn't.
https://www.bristol.ac.uk/news/2021/january/crocodile-evolution.html
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