Study shows dinosaurs were 'struck down in their prime' by asteroid
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[December 09, 2022]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The age of dinosaurs ended in cataclysm one
spring day 66 million years ago when an asteroid 7.5 miles (12 km) wide
hit Mexico's Yucatan peninsula, triggering the extinction of those
remarkable beasts and about three quarters of Earth's species.
But were the dinosaurs already on the way out, with diversification
faltering and rates of evolution sputtering, as some scientists have
proposed? The answer is a definite "no," according to a new study that
modeled food chains and ecological habitats in North America, the part
of the world best represented in the fossil record from that time.
The researchers looked at the 18 million years before the asteroid
impact that ended the Cretaceous Period and the 4 million years
afterward at the outset of the Paleogene Period, when mammals asserted
their dominance following the demise of the dinosaurs - aside from their
bird lineage.
Based on more than 1,600 fossils, the researchers reconstructed the food
chains and habitat preferences of land and freshwater vertebrates. These
included the likes of giant meat-eater T. rex, three-horned Triceratops,
tank-like Ankylosaurus, crocs, turtles, frogs, fish and the various
smallish mammals that lived under the feet of the dinosaurs.
Dinosaurs were entrenched in stable ecological niches for which they
were well adapted, the researchers found.
"In other words, the dinosaurs were struck down in their prime," said
ecologist Jorge García-Girón of the University of Oulu in Finland and
University of León in Spain, lead author of the research published in
the journal Science Advances.
But mammals had begun laying the groundwork for their later ascent,
diversifying their ecological niches and evolving more varied diets,
behaviors and climate tolerances, García-Girón added.
Dinosaurs continued to evolve and adapt during the twilight of their
reign, with new species appearing and old ones disappearing, the study
found. Some of the major plant-eaters like the horned and duckbilled
dinosaurs were being replaced by a greater variety of medium-sized
herbivores.
Some previous research has suggested that dinosaur biodiversity declined
well before the asteroid impact, based on the fossil record of various
dinosaur families.
"There has been this nagging thought that dinosaurs may have been on
their way out anyway, in the midst of a long-term decline, when the
asteroid put them out of their misery," said University of Edinburgh
paleontologist and study co-author Steve Brusatte. "We can now say with
conviction: dinosaurs were going strong, with stable ecosystems, right
until the asteroid suddenly killed them off."
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An undated handout illustration shows
the large horned North American dinosaur Triceratops prorsus
munching on cycads as it disturbs placental (left) and marsupial
(right) mammals in the underbrush, while a softshell turtle climbs
up on a log, at the twilight of the age of dinosaurs 66 million
years ago. Henry Sharpe/Handout via REUTERS
The fact that the dinosaurs were so well adapted to their climate
and environment may have been their undoing.
"When the asteroid hit, it threw everything into chaos and dinosaurs
could not deal with the sudden change to a world they were so
accustomed to," Brusatte said.
"Our study suggests that it was probably the interplay among many
other ecological features, including their body size, diets,
behaviors and ecospace plasticity that prepared certain smaller
animals for greater survivorship after the asteroid impact," said
paleontologist and study co-author Alfio Alessandro Chiarenza of the
University of Vigo in Spain.
Mammals around before the asteroid included a now-extinct
rodent-like group called multituberculates, as well as relatives of
today's marsupials called metatherians and relatives of today's
placentals called eutherians.
After the mass extinction, new mammals arose, including many true
placentals - the group that gives live birth to well-developed
young, encompassing most of today's mammals from whales to bats and
from aardvarks to humans. The post-apocalyptic mammals rapidly
expanded in body size and ecological variety.
"Mammals and dinosaurs have the same origin story - they both
originated and began to diversify back in the Triassic Period,
around 230 million years ago, on the supercontinent of Pangea,"
Brusatte said.
"From there, they went their separate ways, with dinosaurs going for
grandeur and mammals relegated to small sizes in the shadows,"
Brusatte added. "But their fates would be forever intertwined.
Mammals were there when the asteroid hit. They made it through. We
had ancestors that stared down the asteroid."
(Reporting by Will Dunham in Washington, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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