mammals
Transcription
mammals
Mesozoic Earth History II Triassic, Jurassic and Cretaceous evolution Synapsids (mammals) Diapsids (birds and dinosaurs) Angiosperms (flowering plants) Modern Global Vertebrate Diversity Taxa Species Chondrichthys Elasmobranchii Taxa Species Amphibians 810 Osteichthys frogs/toads 4,300 salamanders 425 Teleostei 25,000 “Reptiles” Other 50 turtles 260 Total: 25,860 snakes 2,700 lizards 3,900 crocodiles 21 Birds 9,100 Mammals 4,700 Total: 25,406 All major modern vertebrate groups appeared first in the Mesozoic The Triassic Earth Mesozoic Era Cretaceous Period Jurassic Period Triassic Period The aftermath of the endPermian Extinction knocked the world’s ecosystems for a 5-10 million year long loop. When the dust settled in the later Triassic, the Paleozoic world was gone, replaced by new orders of animals and plants. The first recognizable members of a large number of modern taxa appeared during the Triassic. Cretaceous Period Mesozoic Era Osteichthys 1st Teleost (modern fish) Jurassic Period Anapsida 1st Turtle Synapsids 1st mammal (Morganucodon) Diapsida Triassic Period 1st Crocodile 1st Sphenodont reptile Cretaceous Period Mesozoic Era Amphibia 1st Frog Jurassic Period 1st Salamander Diapsida 1st Bird 1st Lizard Triassic Period Synapsids Cretaceous Period 1st Monotremes Mesozoic Era 1st Marsupial 1st Placental mammal Diapsida Jurassic Period 1st Snakes 1st Unambiguous Flowering Plant Triassic Period Flowering Plants Angiosperms are a fantastically successful and diverse plant group. While arguable fossils and angiosperm-type pollen exist in earlier strata, the only undoubted body fossils of angiosperms are Cretaceous. http://www.mobot.org/MOBOT/Research/APweb/ First Bird The oldest known member of the avian clade, Archaeopteryx was built on the same body design as a small dinosaur. It had both teeth and a tail, as well as other dinosaur features. Archaeopteryx Deinonychus (dinosaur) http://www.ldeo.columbia.edu/dees/courses/v1001 Solnhofen Limestone Jurassic lagerstatten in Germany. The rock is a very fine grained light-colored limestone deposited in an anoxic lagoon close to shore. Marine and (rare) terrestrial fossils are preserved in exquisite detail. http://www.wf.carleton.ca/ Solnhofen Limestone Archaeopteryx The Solnhofen limestone has produced several fossil skeletons of Archaeopteryx, the first bird. Several bits and pieces (e.g., individual feathers) have also been found. http://rainbow.ldgo.columbia.edu/courses/v1001/15.html The front limbs are far larger in relationship to the body than its dinosaur cousins. http://www.dinoeggs.com/ Both the front limbs and tail supported feathers. The breastbone was also keeled, just like a modern bird’s. http://www.dinoeggs.com/ Synapsids The last time we checked in on the synapsids, they had re-diversified after the P/Tr extinction. The late Triassic saw the evolution of the most mammal-like of the mammal-like reptiles. By the latest Triassic, the first true mammal appear. http://www.palaeos.com/Vertebrates/Units/Unit390/000.html “Advanced” Mammal-like Reptiles Cynognathus, an advanced non-mammalian therapsid. © J. Conrad, 2000 Cynognathidids and tritylodonts (superficially resembling dogs and rodents) lacked the rib structure of true mammals. The triylodonts co-existed with true mammals through 50 Ma of the Mesozoic. http://www.geocities.com/CapeCanaveral/Hall/1636/synapsida/therapsida.html Morganucodon http://biociencias.com/preguntas/respuestas Late Triassic The first mammal Small, shrew-like animal http://www.abdn.ac.uk/mammal/first.htm Morganudocon had no ribs on the lumbar vertebrae - indicating the presence of a diaphragm just like all mammals. http://www.museums.org.za/ Sinodelphys Early Cretaceous Liaoning Province of China Oldest known marsupial http://www.carnegiemnh.org/news/03-oct-dec/sinodelphys/ Eomaia Early Cretaceous, ~ 125 Ma Reconstruction based on a recent (2002) fossil find from China. The teeth indicate that this little mouse-sized creature was an early relative of the first placental mammal. Qiang, J. Z-X Luo, C-X Yuan, J.R. Wible, Z-P Zhang, J.A. Georgi. 2002. The earliest eutherian mammal. Nature 416: 816-822. http://www.carnegiemuseums.org/cmnh/research/eomaia/ Eomaia http://www.carnegiemnh.org/news/02-mar-apr/eomaia/eomaiascansoria.htm http://dinosauricon.com/ image © 2001 Todd Marshall All of those groups became important later in the history of life on Earth, but the Mesozoic is the Age of the Dinosaurs! http://www.dinooption.com/din03/di006-001-04.htm http://www2.worldbook.com/ http://yahooligans.yahoo.com/ http://faculty.plattsburgh.edu/thomas.wolosz/sauropod.htm crocodiles birds snakes lizards sphenodonts Living Diapsid Clades Modified from: M.J. Benton 2005. Vertebrate paleontology. Blackwell. Ornithischia versus Saurischia The easiest way to distinguish one dinosaur group from the other is to examine the pelvic structure. Saurischia (lizard-hipped) - pubis points forward, except for in the bird clade (birds are bird-hipped, but not ornithischians) Ornithischia (bird-hipped) - pubis bone points backwards, resting against the ischium, and increasing the space for intestines head tail Saurischia Ornithischia http://www.sdnhm.org/exhibits/lostworld/ Ankylosaurs and Stegosaurs Sauropods Ornithopods Ceratopsians and Pachycephalasaurs Theropods birds http://dinosaur.uchicago.edu/SmallClade.html Ornithopods Ankylosaurs Sauropods Ceratopsians Stegosaurs Sereno, P. 199. The evolution of dinosaurs. Science 284: 2137-2147. Theropods The theropod clade contains all dinosaur predators, from tiny to enormous. The sauropod clade contains the first large dinosaur herbivores, and even midsized species were among the largest land animals that ever lived. The ornithiscian clades diversified in the Cretaceous into a dizzying array of forms. Dinosaur Family Tree http://www.austmus.gov.au/ Coelophysis Triassic Theropods Coelophysidae - small dinosaurs appearing in the late Triassic http://dinosauricon.com/ There is abundant fossil evidence of small, fast carnivores, including at least one huge deposit of bones. Fossilized footprints like those on the top row to left are also common (bottom row contains turkey tracks for comparison) Gatesy, S.M., K. M. Middleton*, F. A. Jenkins, Jr., and N. H. Shubin. 1999. Three-dimensional preservation of foot movements in Triassic theropod dinosaurs Nature 399: 141 – 144. Unlike some later large theropods, Allosauridae had large, functional arms. Cretaceous “Raptors” Bambiraptor Small carnivorous theropod of the Cretaceous. http://www.bowdoin.edu/~dbensen/Dinosaurs/Bambiraptorfeinbergi.html http://www.bambiraptor.com/ Cretaceous “Raptors” Deinonychus was a much larger raptor, with a very large, deadly claw on the back legs. Artists can’t resist making this animal look vicious. image © 2001 Orlando Nelson Grillo image © 2001 Todd Marshall image © 2001 Richard D. Dobbs Jr. http://dinosauricon.com/ Triassic Sauropods The sauropods evolved in the Triassic from bipedal ancestrors like the prosauropods. image © 2001 Richard D. Dobbs Jr Plateosaurus Prosauropods (sister group to sauropods) from the late Triassic. Probably walked on all fours, but capable of walking on hind legs. Relatively large for the Triassic - 20-35 feet long, weighing a ton or more http://dinosauricon.com/ Jurassic Sauropods The longest, heaviest, and tallest animals of the Jurassic were all sauropods. http://www.jpinstitute.com/ Cretaceous Sauropods In the late Cretaceous the Titanosaur family diversified. Contrary to the name, most species were smaller than their Jurassic cousins. 1m Rapetosaurus, with body outline. © Mark Hallett; SUNY-Stony Brook. Ornithiscian Taxa These two groups had unimpressive teeth, and probably ate rather soft plant material. They walked on all fours. Ankylosaurs – armored herbivores with an impressive weapon attached to the tail Stegosaurs – distinguished by having the smallest brain of any dinosaur relative to its body size, these herbivores frequently sported both spines and upright plates on their backs and tails. These three groups had some very impressive dental equipment for processing tough plant material Ornithopods – mostly bipedal herbivores ranging in size from small to medium (for dinosaurs). Pachycephalids – Very similar to ornithopods, but with massively reinforced skulls and necks, probably for smashing into things like rams. Ceratopsians – “Frilled” dinosaurs, with large, bony extensions to the back of the skull. Primarily walked on four feet. Ankylosaurs These armored dinosaurs usually had a big club on the end of the tail. How they used it without killing themselves is somewhat of a mystery (their brains were very small and far away from the tail). http://home.no.net/paleo/ Stegosaurs Species in this family had upright plates staggered along the spine, the function of which is much theorized upon. Many also have spikes on the back and tail, which clearly served some kind of defensive/offensive function. Ornithopods The Mesozoic equivalent of modern ungulates, the ornithopods were a highly diverse and successful group. They are characterized by an impressive dental battery and associated jaw structures. http://home.fuse.net/paleopark/foss3.htm Half of an ornithopod lower jaw showing large numbers of teeth. A single animal could have hundreds of these constantly replaced teeth. The lower and upper jaw worked together to turn even tough plant stems into pulp. Ornithopods Because of a vague resemblance of the skull to a duck’s skull (at least from the top), this group is frequently called “duck-billed” dinosaurs. There is no real resemblance: ducks eat soft water plants, while these megaherbivores had the teeth to eat anything short of wood. http://paleo.amnh.org/ Ornithopods image © 2001 Andrey Atuchin Ornithopods frequently sported large head crests. The nasal cavities extended into these spaces. http://www.dinooption.com/din03/di006-001-04.htm image © 2001 Christopher Srnka http://dinosauricon.com/ Based on trace fossil evidence, many ornithopods lived in large herds, and had communal hatching grounds. Ceratopsians This very successful group evolved from small ornithiscians (like these two) that had small bony frills attached to the back of their skulls. The extensions allowed the attachment of larger jaw muscles. image © 2001 Todd Marshal Microceratops © Joe Tucciarone http://dinosauricon.com/ Ceratopsians Triceratops exemplifies the ceratopsian body form – with a head over ten feet long (the longest head of any land animal) and a solid, bulky skeleton. The strong beak and massively powerful jaws and teeth could have sheared through tough wood, and would have made short work of anything softer. © Frank DeNota http://members.aol.com/triceratopO1/ceratop.html