China Daily (Hong Kong)

THANK DEAD DINOSAURS IF YOU LIKE TO SLEEP AT NIGHT

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Mammals were largely creatures of the night until the dinosaurs were killed off by an asteroid some 66 million years ago, a new study finds.

The findings, described in the journal Nature Ecology & Evolution, illuminate a pivotal transition in the history of Earth’s living things.

Scientists have long wondered whether ancient mammals may have been primarily nocturnal because dinosaurs dominated daytime activities — an idea known as the “nocturnal bottleneck hypothesis”.

Living mammal species today carry many signs of a literal dark past. For example, most mammals (except humans and many other primates) don’t have a fovea, an area in the eye’s retina that allows for the clearest vision. The shape of many mammals’ eyes also favors low-light sensitivit­y rather than the ability to see sharply.

That’s not to mention the heightened sense of smell, broader ability to hear and sophistica­ted whiskers that might have developed in many mammals “to compensate for insufficie­nt visual informatio­n” in dark environmen­ts, the study authors pointed out.

Why were mammals such night owls? They may have had to avoid what the scientists called “antagonist­ic interactio­ns” with dinosaurs, which typically operated in daylight. This flipped schedule may have been a lifesaver, keeping mammals from becoming furry midday snacks.

But the evidence for this idea is mostly indirect, the scientists pointed out. And trying to determine whether some long-dead mammal was nocturnal based on its fossil bone structure is tricky. After all, plenty of daytime mammals today have skull and eye shapes that look like those of a nocturnal animal.

To further probe this mystery, an internatio­nal team of researcher­s compared the activity patterns for 2,415 different mammal species. They collected records from databases, research articles, field guides and encycloped­ias about the behavior of these species, and determined whether their behavior fit into one of five patterns, including nocturnal (active at night), diurnal (active in the day) and cathemeral (active during both day and night).

They focused on species in three categories — nocturnal, diurnal and cathemeral — and ran an analysis of the mammalian family tree. They found that the ancestors of today’s mammals were probably nocturnal, and probably stayed nocturnal until around the time that the dinosaurs died off.

Their analysis showed that the shift among some mammal species to diurnal activity happened after the extinction event. Though scientists can’t say that one caused the other, the study provides fresh circumstan­tial evidence.

However, it also appears that cathemeral activity (operating partly during both day and night) may have emerged much earlier, roughly 9 million years before the dinosaurs disappeare­d.

If dinosaurs still dominated the daytime, then why would some mammals start to shift into that space?

There are a few possible explanatio­ns. Perhaps cathemeral mammals were trying to reduce the chances of being eaten by other mammals at night. Perhaps the emergence and spread of flowering plants (and the insects that evolved with them) provided new opportunit­ies for mammals to flourish.

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