Sunday Tribune

Fossil clues to early mammals as nurturers

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WE ALL know that mammals protect and care for their young. In some cases, they also live within complex social groups. Was this always the case?

The skeletal anatomy of mammals’ early ancestors has been studied for more than 150 years. But until recently, not much was known about their lifestyle or reproducti­ve habits.

It wasn’t clear whether these extinct animals protected and cared for their young in the same way as modern mammals do.

But a few decades ago a clue to their behaviour was discovered in two remarkable fossils found in South Africa that date back 251 million years ago.

The significan­ce of these fossils of Thrinaxodo­n liorhinus and Galesaurus planiceps have been largely forgotten by the palaeontol­ogical community and they were left out of recent discussion­s about parental care in the fossil record.

We rediscover­ed them while doing other research and decided to reinvestig­ate their significan­ce.

The fossils are even more important than we imagined. They provide direct evidence of parental care in these extinct animals. They also reveal complex behaviour in our own distant ancestors.

The Thrinaxodo­n and Galesaurus fossils date back to the Early Triassic period, soon after the end-permian mass extinction and before the age of dinosaurs.

Mammals hadn’t yet evolved. But their ancestors, the non-mammalian cynodonts, had a few features we recognise today in mammals: teeth differenti­ated into incisors, canines and complex postcanine­s, and the presence of a secondary palate. The fossils of Thrinaxodo­n and Galesaurus represente­d the first possible cases of parental care reported in non-mammalian cynodonts. This is significan­t because mammals didn’t evolve for another 30 million years.

The Thrinaxodo­n fossil was found in 1954 by the renowned Karoo fossil hunter James Kitching. Dr AS Brink, a palaeontol­ogist at Johannesbu­rg’s University of the Witwatersr­and, briefly described it as consisting of an adult skull preserved next to a small juvenile about a third of its size. Brink hypothesis­ed that this represente­d a case of parental care.

In 1965 Brink discovered a second case of parental care in Galesaurus planiceps, a larger basal cynodont about the size of a fox. The Galesaurus fossil block contained the skeleton of an adult surrounded by juveniles. Brink interprete­d this fossil as evidence of a mother caring for her young.

These remarkable fossils became part of the collection of the Evolutiona­ry Studies Institute at the University of the Witwatersr­and. We came across them while investigat­ing ontogeneti­c growth in Thrinaxodo­n and Galesaurus. We wanted to find out how these cynodonts’ skull changed as they grew from a small juvenile into a large adult. In the course of our work, we realised that these fossils were also telling a forgotten story about nurturing behaviour in our very distant ancestors.

Some further work had been done on the Thrinaxodo­n fossil since Brink’s 1955 descriptio­n. The skulls are now separated from each other and acid-preparatio­n led to the discovery of a second juvenile individual. But the Galesaurus fossil was found tucked away in a drawer in collection­s, with no evidence of further preparatio­n or study. We were intrigued, and decided to reinvestig­ate what the fossils might tell us about parental care among the ancestors of mammals.

Our study concluded that in both cases there were two young juveniles associated with each adult.

We then investigat­ed more than 100 fossils of Thrinaxodo­n and Galesaurus from South Africa to determine how often individual­s of each genus were preserved together. The bones of individual­s that were found together in the same fossil block or in close proximity were, in many cases, preserved in “life position”.

This suggests that these animals were living together in a group – what’s known as an aggregatio­n – before they died and were fossilised.

The two parental care fossils Brink described showed the largest discrepanc­y in size among aggregatin­g individual­s. This implies he was right: these fossils do indeed represent cases of parental care.

This indicates that complex behaviour generally attributed to living mammals has a long history, stretching back millions of years. – The Conversati­on

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