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New Zealand's First Land Mammal Discovered
Posted by
kdawson
on Wed Dec 13, 2006 01:09 PM
from the furry-feet dept.
from the furry-feet dept.
Bob Beale writes to clue us to big news from New Zealand. The country has long been thought to have been devoid of land mammals until recent times. No mammal fossils had ever been found there; but now one has. From the article: "Small but remarkable fossils found in New Zealand will prompt a major rewrite of prehistory textbooks, showing for the first time that the so-called 'land of birds' was once home to mammals as well. The tiny fossilized bones — part of a jaw and hip — belonged to a unique, mouse-sized land animal unlike any other mammal known... The fact that even one land mammal had lived there, at least 16 million years ago, has put paid to the theory that New Zealand's rich bird fauna had evolved there because they had no competition from land mammals."
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Hobbits? (Score:2)
well (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:well (Score:5, Funny)
Parent
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
Re:well (Score:5, Funny)
That sound you heard going over your head was an African Swallow.
Parent
Re:well (Score:4, Funny)
Parent
Re: Birds hunting off-shore (Score:5, Informative)
Parent
Re: Birds hunting off-shore (Score:4, Interesting)
Parent
I disagree (Score:5, Interesting)
I don't really see how... one small mouse, even if there was 1 million of them, wouldn't really have made much difference to birds; it'd only be preditors that made a big difference
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I don't really see how... one small mouse, even if there was 1 million of them, wouldn't really have made much difference to birds; it'd only be preditors that made a big difference
They would make a difference... as food
tm
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Yeah, right, because mice never eat eggs (Score:5, Funny)
Parent
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Owls crap out mice skeletons, safe to assume other birds do as well, until they find more than parts of one I'm still skeptical.
Re:I disagree (Score:4, Insightful)
Umm, New Zealand is about 1000 miles from Australia last time I checked.
Hardly a short flight for anything but an albatross.
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
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Well, It Certainly Impacts the Theory (Score:5, Interesting)
So now we need to explain that the mouse and other mammals were either restricted by food sources or eliminated. It also has to explain why there aren't more mammals. What is it about New Zealand? Did a volcano periodically remove all life from the island so that only birds could repopulate it at some point? Perhaps the only mammals that survived a food shortage were mice which were subsequently overhunted by the birds? These are the new questions that now must be answered.
So we're still left with this question of why these 1 million mice didn't evolve or why their bird eating relatives didn't thrive on the island. I heavily endorse and suggest Guns, Germs & Steel if you haven't had the time to read it. It asks questions about subjects like these that for a long time people just used the creation theories to explain. Now we're finally starting to look for answers as to why the way things are the way they are and why some populations of humans are better off or have more 'cargo' than others.
Parent
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Re:I disagree (Score:5, Insightful)
Parent
If it was 'another type' of mammal though... (Score:2)
Mammals?! Oh, my... (Score:4, Funny)
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modify the theory (Score:5, Funny)
OK, that theory is total crap now.
Here's the new theory:
New Zealand's rich bird fauna had evolved there because they had only a little bit of competition from one tiny land mammal.
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Corrected theory statement (Score:5, Insightful)
New Zealand's rich bird fauna had evolved there because they had little competition from land mammals.
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New Zealand's rich bird fauna had evolved there because they had no competition from land mammals, or at least none worth speaking of.
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Dammit, you just blew my whole thesis.
One theory posits that ancient Australia... (Score:5, Funny)
I suspect these are the bones of a dirty, little rat.
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Hah! You have it the wrong way round.
Australia was colonised by people to whom it was said "Sod you, your going somewhere else!"
New Zealand was colonised by people by whom it was said "Sod this, I'm going somewhere else!"
Re:One theory posits that ancient Australia... (Score:4, Funny)
That's why we New Zealanders have so much respect for Australians.
Their ancestors have stood before some of the most prestigious judges in England!
On a related note, when going to Australia, there's a field on the form you fill in before entry asking if you have any criminal convictions. DON'T tell the customs people that you didn't realise it was still a requirement. They somehow fail to see the funny side.
Parent
Food for the birds? (Score:4, Insightful)
I'd suggest a minor change to the theory instead of chucking the whole thing.
I don't see this (Score:2)
The fact that even one land mammal had lived there, at least 16 million years ago, has put paid to the theory that New Zealand's rich bird fauna had evolved there because they had no competition from land mammals.
The big question is what happened to the mammals? If mammals in New Zealand were wiped out millions of years ago, then the original "birds evolved without mammals" theory is quite valid. The only real way I see that happening is if New Zealand were completely covered by ice or some similar cata
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1. Maybe NZ was inhabited by birds and mammals at one time, the lot of them got wiped out, and birds repopulated it from beyond water by island hopping but mammals didn't swim as far as the birds could fly. Maybe this one mouse fossil is from just before the catastrophe.
2. Maybe it really was eaten elsewhere and was part of a dropping.
3. Maybe only a few mammals that didn't make the evolutionary cut ever got onto NZ, and they died out before the big explosion in mammal evolutio
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New Zealand already has two native species of bat. They were the previously only known native mammals in NZ. This is why these articles are concentrating on the 'land mammal' angle.
Damn friends... (Score:2)
Did it look like this? (Score:2)
Full article available via PNAS as 'open access' (Score:5, Informative)
Miocene mammal reveals a Mesozoic ghost lineage on insular New Zealand, southwest Pacific -- Worthy et al., 10.1073/pnas.0605684103 -- Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences [pnas.org]
The abstract is standard HTML, but the full article is in PDF format (link to the full article PDF [pnas.org]).
Citation:
Worthy, T. H., A. J. Tennyson, M. Archer, A. M. Musser, S. J. Hand, C. Jones, B. J. Douglas, J. A. McNamara and R. M. Beck (2006). Miocene mammal reveals a Mesozoic ghost lineage on insular New Zealand, southwest Pacific. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A.
(no volume or page numbers as this article has not yet been published in print).
New mammals are great and all... (Score:2)
Bats (Score:2, Informative)
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Let's check.
Warm blooded... yep.
Gives birth to live young... yep.
Produces milk from glands for it's young.. yep.
Has hair... Yep...
Classic mammal even by the good old 3rd grade definition that excludes the duck billed platypus and that other strange mammal that lays eggs.
Re:Bats (Score:4, Interesting)
Still, I don't see this that hard a fact to reconcile with the traditional view of NZ as a Kingdom of Birds. The animal was still only a small critter. Sure, critters as small as rats are known to have exterminated ground-dwelling bird species from isolated island ecosystems. But NZ is much bigger than Hawaii, Mauritius, Galápagos and other famous examples of island extinction. This would mean its bird-dominated ecosystems and bird species would have been much more robust and resistant to a mammalian threat. Why, there were large, flightless predatory birds on the island continent of South Africa before the Great American Interchange. And how about the ostrich, emu & co.? [wikipedia.org]
This new fossil mammal also appears to represent a very ancient lineage dating back to early Cretaceous mammals. We know for fact these critters were not necessarily some übermammal bird-pwners: after the KT extinction (the one that killed the dinosaurs, y'know), for a short while birds were among the top predators, and there were many other flightless birds, too, all over the world. This seems to indicate that early mammals were not the bird menace modern placental mammals like rats, pigs, and cats (and us) are. Nothing mysterious going on here, methinks. You simply cannot compare an advanced Neogene placental to a primitive Cretaceous type of proto-shrew in terms of predatory efficiency.
And how about this possibility: NZ only became a bird paradise after this critter and its relatives went the way of the dodo, for some reason or another?
Parent
Interesting. (Obligatory eyebrow raise.) (Score:5, Interesting)
The fact we have native mammals (bats) in NZ hasn't really been discussed yet. How does that fit in with the observation of a mouse-sized land mammal 16 million years ago?
I find it annoyingly hard to reconcile, as we know that "Life will find a way" - and historically, land mammals have been particularly agressive in their expansion into new habitats, even going back to the sea (Ambulocetus) and taking on the birds (Bats et al).
Someone suggested volcanic activity - but this only applies to the North Island and the top of the South Island. The Taupo "eruption" og 86AD was reported by the chinese and the romans at the time. More than 30 cubic kilometres of matter was ejected in as little as 7 minutes.
However, this is dwarfed by the explosion 20,000 years ago, where over 2,000 cubic kilometres were ejected, as the magma chamber below Lake Taupo collapsed. The ferocity of this event is simply too large to imagine, and the landscape of the North Island was almost totally covered in ignumbrite, a gassy, fast flowing lava, expanding our from the crater at close to the speed of sound, in a wall some 200-300 metres tall...
The resulting Rhyolite domes from previosu explosions were actually topped by the outflow.
However, even as close as 5 kilomtres from the vent, some plant and animal life survived, and as the trillions of litres of water held loosely by the ignumbrite ran swiftly back to the lake area, and the remains of the North Island forests burned in one of the greatest fires in pre-history, and the rock cracked and cooled under muddy rain, the animals, birds, and plants made their way back into the landscape.
So - no - Taupo couldn't wipe out the land mammals of New Zealand, and the South of the South Island is almost entirely devoid of volcanos: Dunedin and Lyttleton volcanos were small, and not very violent in terms of the entire island.
There is an alternative available. The "Pukeko" is a common bird in New Zealand, and they are very poor flyers - certainly not capable of flying from Australia, where they evolved (They are the Australian "Swamp Hen") and yet they florish in New Zealand. They have only been here for a few thousand years. The best theory is that they came across on flotsam ejected from rivers during large storm events in Australia.
If Pukeko cxan arrive that way, then small mammals might also survive to arrive in New Zealand, but the number who arrived might not have been sufficient to maintain a good breeding pool, so the species might go extinct due to the lack of genetic diversity.
This would explain the discovery, the lack of other land mammals and the lack of fossils: if there were bugger all who ever floated over, then we are spectacularly lucky to even have found these ones.
That's my story anyway.
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I'll concur that anybody promoting a purely religious six-day-creationism story really doesn't belong here. It's a theory that's been pretty vigorously refuted from a scientific standpoint, and there's no point in discussing it any further. Skepticism means questioning what you believe to be true, not pursing what's alrea
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Am I missing something here? Who here was arguing evolution that it required this kind of comment? This might as well be an instigation for that sort