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Re: [dinosaur] Therocephalian morphological evolution from macro-predator to small size (free pdf)



"The earliest, basalmost members of this clade are large macropredators, and it is later that small carnivores appear, seemingly evolving from top-predator ancestors. In order to test this reading of therocephalian evolution, variation in rates of body size evolution were tested for and incorporated into an ancestral reconstruction. Similar studies were made of the evolution of discrete characters related to carnivory. All analyses indicate the ancestral therocephalian was a large macro-predator, with serrated teeth, elongated canines and robust lower jaws. Small sizes apparently evolve later. It is therefore suggested that the hypercarnivore ratchet is a feature of mammalian evolution."

As Brocklehurst notes, there is a rather more famous example of this, of course. Basal neotheropods were committed hypercarnivores as big as therocephalians, and basal averostrans and basal tetanurines larger by far than therocephalians, yet the origin of birds and other smaller non-hypercarnivorous maniraptoriforms lies through these phases.

I definitely agree with the idea that the loss of the talonid and other modifications of carnivorous mammal molars limits their ability to move from hypercarnivory in ways that less-derived teeth can.

On Wed, Apr 10, 2019 at 3:32 AM Ben Creisler <bcreisler@gmail.com> wrote:

Ben Creisler
bcreisler@gmail.com

A new paper:

Neil Brocklehurst (2019)
Morphological evolution in therocephalians breaks the hypercarnivore ratchet.
Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 286: 20190590.
Free pdf:


Large carnivorous mammals have been suggested to show a ratchet-like mode of morphological evolution. A limited number of specializations for hypercarnivory evolve repeatedly in multiple clades, with those lineages evolving such specialities being unable to retreat back along their evolutionary trajectory or jump between adaptive peaks. While it has been hypothesized that such mechanisms should have applied to the evolution of other terrestrial carnivores, the non-mammalian synapsid clade Therocephalia appears to defy this expectation. The earliest, basalmost members of this clade are large macropredators, and it is later that small carnivores appear, seemingly evolving from top-predator ancestors. In order to test this reading of therocephalian evolution, variation in rates of body size evolution were tested for and incorporated into an ancestral reconstruction. Similar studies were made of the evolution of discrete characters related to carnivory. All analyses indicate the ancestral therocephalian was a large macro-predator, with serrated teeth, elongated canines and robust lower jaws. Small sizes apparently evolve later. It is therefore suggested that the hypercarnivore ratchet is a feature of mammalian evolution.


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