Daily Mail

How dinosaurs paved way for us ... by shrinking

- By Josh White

DINOSAURS played a key role in humans’ evolution by paving the way for warm-blooded mammals, researcher­s believe.

Over millions of years the majestic beasts gradually shrank in size while adapting to have a higher metabolism.

This evolutiona­ry process allowed dinosaurs to burn energy from food at a faster rate and regulate their own body temperatur­e – leading the population to flourish.

Warm-blooded animals need a lot more energy than cold-blooded creatures such as reptiles and fish, which rely on environmen­tal heat sources. However, they can live in a wider geographic range and have greater mobility and brain power.

Scientists have previously struggled to explain the origins of endothermy – the state of being warm-blooded – mainly due to the lack of fossil evidence.

However, researcher­s at the University of Chile say their latest findings shed light on how mammals became warm-blooded. They analysed how animals regulate their body heat, comparing this with different body sizes of theropods – a group of two-legged, three-toed dinosaurs from which all birds evolved.

Warm-blooded animals must balance how much heat their body makes – known as metabolic production – with how much is lost during physical activity or in cold weather. The new findings suggest metabolic rates rose steadily throughout most of the early to mid- Jurassic period, around 180million years ago.

They also indicate that a warmbloode­d creature would need to shrink nine-fold to have the same energy needs as a cold-blooded creature of the same size. For instance, a 43kg (6.7 stone) modern-day warm-blooded bird would have the same needs as its 370kg (58 stone) cold-blooded dinosaur ancestor, reports the journal Science Advances. The study says the theropods population rose 30fold as they profited from growing smaller as endothermy evolved.

 ??  ?? Flight path: How birds’ ancestors, the theropods, evolved to take to the sky
Flight path: How birds’ ancestors, the theropods, evolved to take to the sky

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