The Mercury News

Giraffes may be long-necked for fights, not just getting food

- By Jack Tamisiea

Since the days of Charles Darwin, the long necks of giraffes have been a textbook example of evolution. The theory goes that as giraffe ancestors competed for food, those with longer necks were able to reach higher leaves, getting a leg — or neck — up over shorter animals.

But a bizarre prehistori­c giraffe relative reveals that, in addition to foraging, fighting may have driven early neck evolution. In a study published Thursday in Science, a team of paleontolo­gists described Discokeryx xiezhi, a giraffe ancestor, as having helmetlike headgear and bulky neck vertebrae. Discokeryx was adapted to absorb and deliver skull-cracking collisions to woo mates and vanquish rivals.

“It shows that giraffe evolution is not just elongating the neck,” said Jin Meng, a paleontolo­gist at the American Museum of Natural History and co-author of the new study. “Discokeryx goes in a totally different direction.”

Meng and his colleagues discovered the fossils in an outcrop of rock in northweste­rn China called the Junggar Basin. Around 17 million years ago, this area was an expanse of savannas and forests that were home to an array of large mammals like shovel-tusked elephants, short-horned rhinoceros­es and burly bear dogs.

While exploring this bonebed in 1996, Meng stumbled across a hunk of skull. He could tell it was a mammalian braincase, but the top was flattened like an iron press. Without more of the animal's skeleton, Meng and his colleagues referred to it as the “strange beast.”

In recent years, more fossilized material — such as teeth and jaw fragments — began to surface in the Junggar Basin, helping identify the beast. According to Meng, both the creature's teeth and inner ear structure were reminiscen­t of modern giraffes. They determined that Discokeryx was one of the earliest graffids, an ancestral group of hoofed mammals that gave rise to giraffes. Discokeryx likely resembled an okapi, a forest-dwelling cousin of modern giraffes.

Its neck was long, but nothing like a modern giraffe's, and researcher­s have yet to pinpoint how the animal's anatomical features connect with its counterpar­ts today. Still, Discokeryx was distinguis­hed by its bizarre skull.

According to Shi-Qi Wang, a paleontolo­gist at the Chinese Academy of Sciences and another author of the study, the saucerlike bone capping the animal's head was probably sheathed in keratin. As the keratin grew, older layers were pushed out, forming a thick dome. This made Discokeryx look like it was wearing a poorly fitting bicycle helmet. Its bony cap was anchored to dense vertebrae in the animal's neck. When it came time to butt heads, the vertebrae locked together into a column perpendicu­lar to the head dome, forming a literal battering ram.

 ?? WANG YU AND GUO XAIOCONG VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Discokeryx xiezhi, foreground, and present-day giraffes.
WANG YU AND GUO XAIOCONG VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES Discokeryx xiezhi, foreground, and present-day giraffes.

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