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Page 1: Robert Feranec Curator of Vertebrate Paleontology, NYSM

Robert FeranecCurator of Vertebrate Paleontology, NYSM

TOTALLY AWESOME: Extreme Evolution in Mammals—YEAH!! (with fist pump)

Page 2: Robert Feranec Curator of Vertebrate Paleontology, NYSM

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Who’s the Biggest?

Who’s the Smallest?

Who’s the Baddest?

Best Common Name?

Best Scientific Name?

Page 3: Robert Feranec Curator of Vertebrate Paleontology, NYSM

Who’s the Biggest?:Paraceratherium

•Age: 30 million years ago•Height: upto 23 feet tall (15 feet at shoulder)•Weight: upto 20 tons

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Who’s the Smallest?:Batodonoides

•Age: 53 million years ago•Height: small•Weight: 1.3 grams

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Best Scientific Name?:Sunkahetanka pahinsintewakpa

•Age: 28 million years ago•Weight: 20 kgs

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Hesperocyonidae (distant canid relative)

Page 6: Robert Feranec Curator of Vertebrate Paleontology, NYSM

Best Common Name?:Gunther’s Dik Dik

•Age: Modern•Height: upto 40 cm•Weight: upto 5 kgs

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EXTREME?

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Head Gear

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Why Head Gear?

Defense:

Combat:

Mate Recognition:

Ornamentation:

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Differential survival and reproduction

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Sexual SelectionCertain evolutionary traits are the result of

intraspecific competition

Intrasexual Competition: Generally Male-Male competition, female mates with the “winner”

Intersexual Competition: Female Choice

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Types of Head Gear?

Ossicones:

Horns:

Antlers:

Pronghorns:

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Head Gear: Ossicones

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Head Gear: OssiconesFossils

Sivatherium~8,000 years ago

Samotherium~4 million years ago

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Head Gear: Horns

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Head Gear: HornsFossils

Hoplitomeryx

Syndoceras Synthetoceras

Bison latifrons

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Cranioceras

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Head Gear: HornsFossils

Arsinoitherium (from Egypt)Age: 35 Ma

Height: ~7 feet at shoulder

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Head Gear: HornsFossils

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Head Gear: HornsFossils: Brontotheriidae

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Mylagaulid rodentsWhy do they have those crazy horns?

30-5 MaNorth America

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Mylagaulid Ecology• Herbivorous• Body size:

~ 0.5-5 kg.• Fossorial

(burrowing), but how?

• One of the only fossorial animals with horns

Mill

ions

of y

ears

ago

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Page 22: Robert Feranec Curator of Vertebrate Paleontology, NYSM

Fossorial adaptation in rodents

Figure from Stein 2000

Scratch digging

Chisel tooth digging

Head lift digging

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Head digging in mylagaulids

Features consistent with head-digging:

• Thickened, projecting nasal bones

• Tall, forward-tilted occipital plate

• Shortened skull

• Powerful forelimbs

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Likely evolved from head-lift diggers

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Why horns?

Possible uses of horns:

• Species recognition

• Digging

• Sexual display/combat

• Defense

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Horns : digging implement

In favor:• Higher occipital plate with

taller hornsAgainst:• Position, orientation of

horns• Change in horns through

time• Increases force needed to

dig• CONCLUSION: unlikely

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Horns : sexual display/combat

• Not sexually dimorphic

• Lack of visual ability

• Display useless underground

• Orientation of horns

• CONCLUSION: unlikely

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Horns : defense

• Passive or active defense

• Predator diversity: mustelids (weasels and stoats), snakes?

• CONCLUSION: Likely, consistent with available evidence.

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Horns…or Not Horns

CoelodontaLate Pleistocene (~20,000 years ago)

Europe

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NOT “true” horns

CoelodontaLate Pleistocene (~20,000 years ago)

Europe

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Horns…or Not Horns

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Horns

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Horns…or Not Horns

Narwhal (modern)

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NOT Horns

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Head Gear: Pronghorns

Antilocapra americana

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Head Gear: PronghornsFossils

Merycodus15 Mya

Ramoceros12 Mya

Ilingoceros8 Mya

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Head Gear: Antlers

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Head Gear: Antlers

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Head Gear: AntlersFossils

Megaloceros giganteus~10000 years ago

•Each antler is 6ft long

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Antlers and…

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Antlers and…Saberteeth!!!

MoschusModern

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Page 41: Robert Feranec Curator of Vertebrate Paleontology, NYSM

Why Head Gear?

Defense:

Combat:

Mate Recognition:

Ornamentation:

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Evolution of saberteeth

Thylacosmilus

SmilodonEusmilus

Machaerodus

Machaeroides

Homotherium

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Page 43: Robert Feranec Curator of Vertebrate Paleontology, NYSM

From Akersten 1985

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Homotherium Smilodon

Is the evolution of the sabertooth convergent evolution or parallel evolution?

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Convergent Evolution vs. Parallel Evolution?

Convergent Evolution: describes the acquisition of the same biological trait in unrelated lineages.

Parallel Evolution: the development of a similar trait in different not closely related species (that is in species of a different clade), but descending from the same ancestor.

Page 46: Robert Feranec Curator of Vertebrate Paleontology, NYSM

Question: How do we distinguish how closely an organism is related?

How to Solve this?

Hall (2003) Biological Reviews

Page 47: Robert Feranec Curator of Vertebrate Paleontology, NYSM

Question: How do we distinguish how closely an organism is related?

How to Solve this?

Convergence: Similarity arising through independent evolution having different developmental pathways

Parallelism: A feature present in closely related organisms but not present continuously in all members of the lineage, and uses similar developmental pathways.

Hall (2003) Biological Reviews

Page 48: Robert Feranec Curator of Vertebrate Paleontology, NYSM

Evolution of saberteeth

How do they develop?

Thylacosmilus Machaerodus

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You are what you eat…and drink

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Isotopes in modern precipitation

18O

SM

OW

AugustJanuary January

FLAGSTAFF, AZ 1961-1963

From IAEA GNIP Database

+18O

-18O

Oxygen Isotopes(Isotope: same # of P, E- but different # of N)

Page 51: Robert Feranec Curator of Vertebrate Paleontology, NYSM

+18O

-18O

Summer Summer

Winter

Predicted cyclicity in oxygen isotope values of enamel carbonate

TipBase

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+18O

-18O

TipBase

12 months

Predicted cyclicity in oxygen isotope values of enamel carbonate

25mm 85mm

60 mm

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-10

-9

-8

-7

-6

-5

-4

-3

-2

-1

0

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100

18 O

val

ue

-10

-9

-8

-7

-6

-5

-4

-3

-2

-1

0

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100

18 O

val

ue

Isotope values for

S. fatalis

Distance from enamel-root contact (mm)

Average: 66 mm / 12 months =

5.5 mm per month

Feranec, in prep

Page 54: Robert Feranec Curator of Vertebrate Paleontology, NYSM

Panthera tigris2

Panthera leo1

Smilodon gracilis ~12 months

18 months

9-14 months

6.7 mm/month

3 mm/month

9 mm/month

Comparison in Felid canine development

1. Smuts et al., 1978

2. Mazak, 1981

Smilodon fatalis ~18 months5-7 mm/month

Homotherium serum ~15 months2.5 mm/month

Panthera leo >18 months2.8 mm/month

Panthera atrox >18 months2.9 mm/month

TAXONDURATION

OF GROWTHRATE

Feranec. 2004, 2005, 2008

Page 55: Robert Feranec Curator of Vertebrate Paleontology, NYSM

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Convergent Evolution

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Who’s the Biggest?

Who’s the Smallest?

Who’s the Baddest?

Best Common Name?

Best Scientific Name?

Page 57: Robert Feranec Curator of Vertebrate Paleontology, NYSM

Who’s the Baddest?:2010 Championship

Winner

4. Smilodon populator

1. Ursus maritimus tyrannus

2. Andrewsarchus mongoliensis

3. Daeodon hollandi

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Who’s the Baddest?:

V.

6 ft. tall at shoulderWeighs up to 2000 lbs

4ft. tall at shoulderWeighs up to 1300 lbs

4. Smilodon populator1. Ursus maritimus tyrannusEX

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Who’s the Baddest?:

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Who’s the Baddest?:

Polar Bear Wins!!EXTREM

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Who’s the Baddest?:

2. Andrewsarchus mongoliensis 3. Daeodon hollandi

Height: up to 8 ft at shoulderLength: 11 feet longWeight: up to 2200 lbs.Age: 40 Ma

Height: up to 7 ft at shoulderLength: 12 feet longWeight: up to 2200 lbs.Age: 25 Ma

V.

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Who’s the Baddest?:

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Andrewsarchus mongoliensis Daeodon hollandi

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Who’s the Baddest?:

Andrewsarchus Wins!!EXTREM

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Who’s the Baddest?:

Winner

1. Ursus maritimus tyrannicus

4. Smilodon fatalis

1. Ursus maritimus tyrannicus

2. Andrewsarchus mongoliensis

2. Andrewsarchus mongoliensis

2. Daeodon hollandi

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Page 65: Robert Feranec Curator of Vertebrate Paleontology, NYSM

Who’s the Baddest?:

V.

6 ft. tall at shoulderWeighs up to 2000 lbs

Can stand up to 11 feet tall

1. Ursus maritimus tyrannus 2. Andrewsarchus mongoliensis

Height: up to 8 ft at shoulderLength: 11 feet longWeight: up to 2200 lbs.

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Who’s the Baddest?:

Size ComparisonEXTREM

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Who’s the Baddest?:

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Ursus maritimus tyrannus!!!

Page 68: Robert Feranec Curator of Vertebrate Paleontology, NYSM

Thank you

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