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The origins of mammal growth patterns during the Jurassic mammalian radiation.

Elis NewhamIan J CorfePhilippa BrewerJen A BrightVincent FernandezNeil J GostlingSimone HoffmannKai R K JägerErika KagueGoran LovricFederica MaroneElsa PanciroliPhilipp SchneiderJulia A SchultzHeikki SuhonenAlex WitchellPamela G GillThomas Martin
Published in: Science advances (2024)
We use synchrotron x-ray tomography of annual growth increments in the dental cementum of mammaliaforms (stem and crown fossil mammals) from three faunas across the Jurassic to map the origin of patterns of mammalian growth patterns, which are intrinsically related to mammalian endothermy. Although all fossils studied exhibited slower growth rates, longer life spans, and delayed sexual maturity relative to comparably sized extant mammals, the earliest crown mammals developed significantly faster growth rates in early life that reduced at sexual maturity, compared to stem mammaliaforms. Estimation of basal metabolic rates (BMRs) suggests that some fossil crown mammals had BMRs approaching the lowest rates of extant mammals. We suggest that mammalian growth patterns first evolved during their mid-Jurassic adaptive radiation, although growth remained slower than in extant mammals.
Keyphrases
  • early life
  • magnetic resonance
  • high resolution
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • oral health