Skip to content
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
  • Contact

  • Actually
  • Australia
  • National news
  • Society
  • Education
  • Family
  • Health
  • Fitness
  • Travel
  • Climate change
  • Toggle search form

Research sheds light on how marine ecosystems changed after the dinosaur-killing extinction event

Posted on August 12, 2021 By mindfisi

Sharks may have been spared a global extinction event millions of years ago that wiped out several species, including all large marine reptiles like mosasaurs and non-avian dinosaurs, according to a new study.
Scientists, including those from Swedens Uppsala University, have shed light on how the dinosaur-killing extinction event transformed ecosystems and the kinds of marine organisms the change favoured. They found sharks to have maintained a constant diversity across the Earths oceans during this time.
The researchers analysed the morphology of 1,239 fossil shark teeth pertaining to the K-Pg boundary, which is the period between the late Cretaceous 83.6 million years ago and the early Paleogene 56 million years ago. This is when the age of the dinosaurs came to an end.
The analysis, published on Tuesday in the journal PLOS Biology, included shark species in eight existing orders and one now-extinct order.
Based on the study, scientists point out shark dental diversity was already declining prior to the K-Pg boundary, but remained relatively constant during the mass-extinction event itself.
While some shark species, particularly those with triangular blade-like teeth, suffered selective extinctions during this period linked to the extinction of their prey species researchers say other shark lineages increased in dental diversity after the K-Pg boundary.
Cretaceous anacoracids (an extinct shark family that lived during the Cretaceous period) suffered a selective extinction, captured here by the loss of triangular, blade-like tooth morphologies traditionally associated with apex predator lifestyles, the scientists wrote in the study.
They observed that sharks in the Odontaspididae family, which have narrow, cusped teeth adapted for feeding on fish, increased in diversity, coinciding with the rapid diversification of finned fish in the early Paleogene.
The study suggests this pattern of selective extinctions may reflect an ecological shift from specialist predators to more general bony fish diets.
Coincidentally, the Paleocene diversification of teleosts (a group that includes sharks and fishes with bony skeletons and symmetrical tails) offers a potential driver, coupled with the dietary adaptability of selachimorphs (groups of fishes, including sharks, that have distinct features including cartilaginous skeleton and five to seven gill slits on the sides of the head) as opportunistic generalist predators capable of exploiting emergent food resources, the researchers added.
The scientists call for further studies assessing the shark diversity of this time period sampling more fossil teeth across time and geographies.

Australia

Post navigation

Previous Post: The British and Irish Lions ended their tour of South Africa with a 2-1 series loss sealed by Saturday’s 19-16 defeat
Next Post: The Taliban have captured the city of Faizabad in northern Afghanistan, a local MP told AFP on Wednesday, the ninth provincial capital to fall to the insurgents in less than a week. “Late last night, the security forces who had been fighting the Taliban for s…

More Related Articles

British Columbia recorded another 742 cases of COVID-19 and one related death over the long weekend, health officials said Tuesday. Australia
Zodwa Wabantu alleged that she has had sex with Black Motions’ Thabo and also explained why she ‘hates’ Zahara among other things… Australia
Subscribe to the Cairns Post to get unrestricted digital access, home paper delivery, Apps for iPad and Android and much more… Australia
Megan Woods had said gentailers made ‘commercial decisions’ before power outage. Australia
Life with type 1 diabetes is a juggling act of diet, exercise, and insulin therapy to maintain normal blood sugar levels. While there’s no shortage of solutions in the works for trying to make diabetics’ lives easier, a promising new approach focuses Australia
Here’s your daily update with everything you need to know on the novel coronavirus situation in B.C. Australia

Recent Posts

  • (no title)
  • Officials also said they would delay second shots of the Pfizer vaccine in order to speed up first shots.
  • Following the Competition Commission’s rejection of the deal.
  • An asteroid known as Bennu will pass within half the distance of the Earth to the moon in the year 2135 but the probability of an impact with our planet in the coming centuries is very slight, scientists said Wednesday.
  • A University of Otago study has revealed new evidence of rapid evolution in New Zealand’s native insect species in response to increased exposure to wind from the loss of shelter due to deforestation.

Categories

  • Actually
  • Australia
  • Climate change
  • Education
  • Family
  • Fitness
  • Health
  • National news
  • Society
  • Travel

Copyright © 2022 .

Powered by PressBook Blog WordPress theme