Article 61VBM Terrawatch: how mass extinctions can spur on evolution

Terrawatch: how mass extinctions can spur on evolution

by
Kate Ravilious
from on (#61VBM)

Evidence from 252m years ago shows surviving animals bounced back stronger, fitter, faster and smarter

Mass extinctions are not all bad news: survivors bounce back stronger, fitter, faster and smarter than before. Palaeontologists studying the most deadly mass extinction of all time - the end-Permian, 252m years ago - have shown that predators rapidly became swifter and more deadly, while prey animals adapted and found new ways to survive.

Incredible fossil fish assemblages from China reveal that new hunting modes emerged earlier than previously thought, including fish with masses of teeth, adapted to crushing shells, and streamlined lizard" fish that specialised in ambush, shooting out from murky lairs. Meanwhile, the animals that they preyed upon had to develop defences. Some got thicker shells, or developed spines, or themselves became faster in order to help them escape," said Feixiang Wu, from the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing, whose findings are reported in Frontiers in Earth Science.

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