Climate Change

Global warming in past caused mammals to shrink, and it could happen again

Will today's animals have enough time to adapt to human-induced climate change that's happening fast?

 
By Subhojit Goswami
Published: Tuesday 21 March 2017
Besides rising temperatures and drought, nutrient availability may also have a direct effect on body size. Credit:Kai Schreiber / Flicker

At least twice in the ancient past, warm-blooded animals contracted in size when carbon dioxide levels increased and temperatures soared as part of a natural warming, says a new study.

University of New Hampshire researcher Abigail D’Ambrosia, who has been tracking animals and their response to climatic changes, believes that mammals could further shrink in the future under faster human-induced climate change.

The study, published in journal, Science Advances, goes on to explain that mammals and other warm-blooded animals in hotter climates need to shed heat, which leads to shrinking. “Relatively small organisms have a large surface-area-to volume ratio, which means, they have more exposed surface (maybe skin) to help lose heat through. This makes it easier to deflect heat and stay cool.  A larger organism, on the contrary, has a small surface-area-to-volume ratio, which means, they have relatively less surface area for heat to pass through. This is why large animals are better at retaining heat,” explains Abigail

Besides rising temperatures and drought, nutrient availability may also have a direct effect on body size. The study also claims that differing precipitation patterns between two warming events may have controlled differences in body size change at the events. However, the nature of differing precipitation patterns is not clear.

Precedent set in the past

Mammal dwarfing, according to the study, has been observed along with other changes in community structure during the largest of the ancient global warming events—Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM)—some 56 million years ago. That era must have seen temperatures rise by 5.6 degree Celsius or probably more due to methane emission from dead plants and animals that had accumulated on the sea floor.

The study shows that mammalian dwarfing also accompanied the subsequent, smaller-magnitude warming event—Eocene Thermal Maximum (ETM2) some 53 million years ago.  Statistically, significant decrease in body size during ETM2 was observed in two of four taxonomic groups analysed in this study. Shrinking size was clearly observed in early equids (horses).

Explaining the data found in the layers of rock

This figure is composed of three

  • Each graph (with blue diamonds) shows where the data points were collected
  • The Y axis indicates the depth in the rock record (and also magnetic data from rocks, too).
  • For the blue diamonds, the X axis indicates the carbon isotope value of soil carbonate nodules found in the rocks. The carbon isotope value is important, because this is how events like PETM and ETM2 were identified.
  • In this case, the carbon isotope values suggest that there was some perturbation to Earth's carbon cycle. PETM & ETM2 are always associated with very negative isotope values. These very negative values suggest that there was a large pulse of CO2 pumped into Earth's atmosphere during this time

Species that had shrunk

Based on the research done on terrestrial mammal fossils in the Bighorn Basin of Wyoming (USA), the study has come to a conclusion that three different species shrank about 54 million years ago with the sudden heating up of planet. According to an analysis of fossil teeth, an early compact horse got smaller by 14 per cent from about 17 pounds to 14.6 pounds.

When responding to a question by Down To Earth on how these findings are important for global climate change discourse, Abigail says, “PETM and ETM2 were both warming events caused by increased CO2 concentration in the Earth's atmosphere--very much like today's global warming situation. If we can better understand how animals and ecosystems responded way back then, maybe, we can better prepare for similar changes that are beginning to happen today. It is also important to note how rapidly our atmosphere is changing today. Will organisms and ecosystems today have enough time to adapt to the changing climate like they did 56 million years ago?”

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