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Reptile-like physiology in Early Jurassic stem-mammals.

Elis NewhamPamela G GillPhilippa BrewerMichael J BentonVincent FernandezNeil J GostlingDavid HaberthürJukka JernvallTuomas KankaanpääAki KallonenCharles NavarroAlexandra PacureanuKelly RichardsKate Robson BrownPhilipp SchneiderHeikki SuhonenPaul TfforeauKatherine A WilliamsBerit Zeller-PlumhoffIan J Corfe
Published in: Nature communications (2020)
Despite considerable advances in knowledge of the anatomy, ecology and evolution of early mammals, far less is known about their physiology. Evidence is contradictory concerning the timing and fossil groups in which mammalian endothermy arose. To determine the state of metabolic evolution in two of the earliest stem-mammals, the Early Jurassic Morganucodon and Kuehneotherium, we use separate proxies for basal and maximum metabolic rate. Here we report, using synchrotron X-ray tomographic imaging of incremental tooth cementum, that they had maximum lifespans considerably longer than comparably sized living mammals, but similar to those of reptiles, and so they likely had reptilian-level basal metabolic rates. Measurements of femoral nutrient foramina show Morganucodon had blood flow rates intermediate between living mammals and reptiles, suggesting maximum metabolic rates increased evolutionarily before basal metabolic rates. Stem mammals lacked the elevated endothermic metabolism of living mammals, highlighting the mosaic nature of mammalian physiological evolution.
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