Ancient
nightlife: Forebearers of mammals were nocturnal partiers
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[September 04, 2014]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A nocturnal
existence is a way of life for numerous mammals, from bats that swoop
through dark skies to skunks that emit their noxious spray under
moonlight and majestic lions, tigers and leopards that prowl the night.
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But this love of nightlife appears to have begun much earlier than
previously believed in the lineage that led to mammals - perhaps 300
million years ago - way before the first true mammals skittered
under the feet of the dinosaurs about 100 million years later.
Scientists on Wednesday said a study of fossils of small ring-shaped
bones embedded in the eyes of an important group of ancient mammal
relatives called synapsids indicated that many of them thrived at
night or in the twilight.
The findings appear in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society
B.
The mammal relatives arose around 320 million years ago and became
the dominant land creatures during the Permian Period that preceded
the rise of the dinosaurs in the Triassic Period that followed. They
prospered worldwide, with plant and meat-eating beasts.
"The study does give us new insights into the daily lives of some of
our most ancient relatives," said Kenneth Angielczyk, a
paleontologist with the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago.
The findings indicate nocturnal activity has a deep history in the
lineage leading to mammals. This contradicts the conventional wisdom
that the nocturnal lifestyle emerged with the appearance of the
first bona fide mammals about 200 million years ago because they
needed to slink around in the dark to avoid becoming dinosaur chow.
The researchers focused on bones called scleral ossicles that reveal
the eye's dimensions and enable predictions about light sensitivity,
indicating whether an animal was nocturnal or active during daytime
or active in twilight conditions. Modern mammals lack these bones.
The researchers scoured museum collections around the world and
found 38 specimens comprising 24 species, mostly from the United
States and South Africa but also from Russia and Brazil.
"Specimens with well-preserved scleral rings are rare, so it took a
lot of searching," Angielczyk said.
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Researchers found that the eyes of ancient synapsids likely spanned
a range of light sensitivities, some suited to nighttime and others
favoring daylight. The oldest synapsids possessed eye dimensions
consistent with night activity. Predators were more likely than
herbivores to be nocturnal.
One of the best known and oldest of the ancient synapsids is
Dimetrodon, a sharp-toothed, 11-foot-long (3.5 meters), four-legged
predator whose back was topped by a remarkable semicircular
sail-like structure. The study found Dimetrodon probably was
nocturnal, hunting at night like many big cats today.
"Nocturnality comes with advantages and disadvantages," said another
of the researchers, Lars Schmitz, a biology professor at Claremont
McKenna, Pitzer and Scripps Colleges in California.
"It's cooler at night, which may be beneficial for some species. As
a hunter, it may be easier to approach prey. On the other hand, the
dim light levels make it difficult for animals. Keen senses are
beneficial," Schmitz added.
(Reporting by Will Dunham; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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