When Giant Lemurs Ruled Madagascar

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I actually found this extremely interesting, there is a lot of animals that used to exist on Madagascar like for one the Voay which was the Madagascar Crocodile. Which recently they have found a ton of skulls in caves. The megafauna is extremely compelling time period in evolution. Thanks for posting!

👍︎︎ 3 👤︎︎ u/MyWolfspirit 📅︎︎ Sep 26 2019 đź—«︎ replies
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I am so excited to be the person that gets to announce this... Eons enamel pins are available now! Get yours at DFTBA.com!! Just a few thousand years ago, the island of Madagascar was inhabited by giants. Giant … lemurs. These remarkable primates lived only on Madagascar, and they were part of an evolutionary event that continues to this day - a radiation that saw primates adapt to fill the ecological niches that, in other places, were occupied by totally different animals -- like sloths, monkeys, and even woodpeckers. There were the so-called monkey lemurs, named for their skeletal similarities to baboons. There were three species of koala lemurs, which of course were not koalas, but they specialized in eating leaves and had grasping, pincer-like feet that kept their large bodies in the trees. But maybe the weirdest of these extinct giants were the sloth lemurs. This family included Archaeoindris, the biggest lemur that ever lived, and most of its members seemed to have adaptations for hanging from tree branches, like sloths do today. What all these strange creatures had in common was their large body size: they likely ranged from the size of a large terrier to almost as big as an adult male gorilla. But today, they’re all gone. Their largest living relative is the modestly sized indri. So what happened here? How did such a diverse group of primates evolve in the first place, and how did they help shape the unique environments of Madagascar? And how did they get winnowed down, leaving only their smaller relatives behind? As far as that last question goes, the answer might lie in the arrival of another, different type of primate on the island: us. Madagascar has been separated from all other land masses since the Late Cretaceous Period, about 85 million years ago. And the fossils that date to the time after its split from the Indian subcontinent include some very cool dinosaurs, like Majungasaurus, and weird early mammals, like the cute little Vintana. But the fossil record of Madagascar stops abruptly at the beginning of the Cenozoic Era, about 66 million years ago. There are almost no fossils on Madagascar from that whole stretch of time, until about 26,000 years ago, which makes the early evolution of the few mammal groups that got to the island kind of mysterious. But, based on genetic studies, we’re pretty sure that the ancestors of modern lemurs made it there after it had already become an island. The most widely-accepted estimate says that lemurs arrived on Madagascar between 50 million and 60 million years ago. So, how did those first lemurs get there? Experts think they probably ... floated. That’s right! Some paleontologists have suggested the lemurs rafted over on large mats of vegetation or maybe inside hollow trees that washed out across the Mozambique Channel - a distance today of more than 400 kilometers. This kind of movement is called a “sweepstakes dispersal” - a rare or chance event where an animal is able to cross a pretty extreme barrier. And we’ve talked about this phenomenon before! Most scientists think rodents got from Africa to South America by way of a similar ocean crossing. Those seafaring lemur ancestors were probably very small, like modern mouse and dwarf lemurs, and they might’ve behaved like them, too - sleeping the day away in small groups inside hollow trees. And it’s also been suggested that they could’ve been able to enter a state of torpor or hibernation, again like modern mouse and dwarf lemurs do. This would’ve helped them survive a long-distance trip and emerge ready to colonize Madagascar. At least, that’s how the most widely-accepted explanation for how lemurs got to the island. But some experts think that lemurs might actually have taken two trips. This is based on the study of two fossil species, one from Kenya and one from Egypt, that date to well after the earliest lemurs were supposed to have made it to Madagascar. And these two fossils bear some resemblance to the aye-aye, the weirdest and earliest branch off the family tree of all living lemurs. So maybe aye-ayes took a separate trip to Madagascar from all the other lemurs. We just don’t know enough yet to be sure. However lemurs got to the island, once they landed there, they took over in what’s called an adaptive radiation. Over the last 50 to 60 million years, they diversified into eight different families, five of which still have living members, and they filled a huge variety of ecological niches. For example, take the aye-aye. Today, it’s the only species left in its family, and it fills the same basic ecological role as … a woodpecker! It uses its extra-long, extra-creepy third finger to tap on trees to find insect larvae. Then it chews a hole into the bark with its rodent-like incisors, sticks that skinny finger into the hole and pull out grubs. But in the past there was a giant aye-aye. It weighed up to seven times more than the modern aye-aye. And it lived in the dry forests of southwestern Madagascar, where it likely used the same kind of foraging behavior, tapping tree trunks in search of insects, much like a woodpecker. And while lemurs have managed to fill the many vacant niches on the island, they also shaped its ecosystems. Living ruffed lemurs specialize in eating fruit. So they play an important ecological role as seed dispersers. They help plants move their seeds from place to place by eating their fruits and dropping the seeds in new places as they move through the forest. And ruffed lemurs can swallow seeds that are more than 30 millimeters around -- bigger than an American quarter! But there are trees on Madagascar that produce fruits with even bigger seeds. And in the past, there was a giant relative of the ruffed lemurs called Pachylemur that might’ve helped disperse those seeds. We know it was a fruit-specialist, like its living relatives, because of the pattern of wear on its teeth. And at about three or four times the size of living ruffed lemurs, it could’ve easily taken on those really big seeds. But there were also less-friendly interactions taking place between Madagascar’s plants and animals that have left their mark on the island’s plant life to this day. In southern and southwestern Madagascar, there’s an incredibly unique ecoregion called the spiny forest. The vast majority of the plants there are only found on the island, and they’re adapted to hot temperatures and short rainy seasons. They’re also, as the name suggests, totally covered in sharp, thick thorns. Which is strange, because their relatives on the African mainland don’t have thorns. So researchers have hypothesized that the thorns of these tree species are an adaptation for defending its leaves from climbing, leaf-eating animals that aren’t found on the mainland - namely, lemurs. To test this hypothesis, researchers have compared carbon and nitrogen isotope levels from the bones of extinct lemurs to the levels seen in the plants of the spiny forest. This method is based on the idea that you are what you eat - the elements found in the food you eat are incorporated into your tissues. And they found that those isotope levels matched! So it looks like one of the extinct monkey lemurs and one of the extinct sloth lemurs probably ate a lot of the plants of the spiny forest! But since most living lemurs generally don’t eat those plants anymore, it seems that those thorns have become an evolutionary anachronism - a trait that coevolved with species that no longer exist. So, what happened to all the giant primates? After thriving on Madagascar for millions of years, what put an end to their reign? Well, in the Late Pleistocene Epoch, the climate was changing rapidly and becoming more variable. From around 9000 to 5000 years ago, the island’s climate swung back and forth between being much wetter than Madagascar is today and also much drier, with droughts sometimes lasting up to 300 years. Between 4000 and 2500 years ago, the climate continued to become drier, changing vegetation and ecosystems throughout Madagascar. And then, maybe around 2300 years ago, a new primate arrived on the island that would change everything: humans. There’s some controversy about when exactly that happened, because the early archaeological record of the island is incomplete. But the giant lemurs were still alive when people showed up. And it seems like we might have hunted them. There are cut-marked bones of two species of extinct giant lemur from two sites in southwestern Madagascar that seem to be around 2000 years old. But those bones were collected in the early 1900s, and we don’t have a very good record of their context, so some researchers have argued against this as evidence of butchery. However! Some incisors of a giant aye-aye with holes drilled through them were also found in the early 1900s, and were rediscovered in a museum collection in the 1980s. They can’t be radiometrically dated, but there’s no question that humans modified these teeth. We just don’t know when. What we do know is that many of the giant lemurs went extinct around 1000 years ago, along with other megafauna on the island, like pygmy hippos and elephant birds. So it seems the lemurs were able to coexist with the early human inhabitants of Madagascar, at least for a while. This is also when we start to see an increase in charcoal in the sediment record of the island. That charcoal suggests a greater human impact on the landscape, as people started fires to clear land and promote the growth of grass for cattle to feed on. The last known remains of a giant lemur - one of the sloth lemurs - date back just 500ish years ago While we can’t definitively say that human hunting was responsible for their extinction, it’s clear that the extinction was selective: all the large-bodied lemurs are gone. It might also be because they were more easily hunted than their smaller relatives. It might be because larger animals need more space, so they’re more vulnerable to habitat loss and fragmentation. Or it might be because they tend to reproduce more slowly than smaller species. It was probably some combination of all of these. Researchers are still working on figuring out exactly what happened. They’re finding new remains, including some from underwater caves. They’re rediscovering old material in museums. And they’re examining DNA from both ancient and living lemurs to try to piece together the end of the story. And while the giants are gone, the ecosystems that they shaped -- and the lemurs that we still find today -- are reminders of that time when giants ruled Madagascar. Big high fives to this month’s Eontologists: Patrick Seifert, Jake Hart, Jon Davison Ng, and Steve! To become an Eonite, go pledge your support patreon.com/eons! And thanks for joining me in the Konstantin Haase Studio. If you like what we do here, then subscribe at youtube.com/eons.
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Channel: PBS Eons
Views: 583,758
Rating: 4.9499302 out of 5
Keywords: dinosaurs, dinos, paleo, paleontology, scishow, eons, pbs, pbs digital studios, hank green, john green, complexly, fossils, natural history, lemur, madagascar, giant lemur, monkey lemurs, koala lemurs, sloth lemurs, primates, cenozoic, evolution, fossil, sweepstakes dispersal, aye-aye, adaptive radiation, giant aye-aye, spiny forest, evolutionary anachronism, ruffed lemur, pachylemur
Id: 1hTJh8W0khU
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 10min 40sec (640 seconds)
Published: Wed Sep 25 2019
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