Manila Standard

Fossil discovery solves mystery of how pandas became vegetarian

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THE discovery of panda fossils in China has helped researcher­s solve the mystery of how the giant species developed a “false thumb” and became the only dedicated vegetarian in the bear family.

Fossils dating back about six million years found in southwest China’s Yunnan province included a greatly enlarged wrist bone called a radial sesamoid.

It is the oldest known evidence of the modern giant panda’s false thumb that allows it to grip and break heavy bamboo stems, scientists wrote on a research paper published in the latest edition of the Scientific Reports.

The fossils belong to the now-extinct ancient relative of the panda called an Ailurarcto that lived in China six to eight million years ago.

“The giant panda is... a rare case of a large carnivore with a short, carnivorou­s digestive tract... that has become a dedicated herbivore,” Wang Xiaoming, curator of vertebrate paleontolo­gy at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County, said.

“The false thumb in Ailurarcto­s shows... for the first time, the likely timing and steps in the evolution of bamboo feeding in pandas.”

Researcher­s had known about the panda’s false thumb, which works similarly to a human thumb, for about a century. But the lack of fossil evidence had left unanswered questions about how and when the extra digit – not seen in any other bear – evolved.

“While the giant panda’s false thumb is not the most elegant or dexterous... even a small, protruding lump at the wrist can be a modest help in preventing bamboo from slipping off bent fingers,” Wang wrote.

The fossils found near Zhaotong city in the north of Yunnan included a false thumb that was longer than that found in modern pandas, but without an inward hook on the end.

The hook and a fleshy pad around the base of the thumb evolved over time since it had to “bear the burden of considerab­le body weight,” the paper said.

 ?? ?? EVOLVED. This photo taken on June 27, 2022 shows a panda enjoying a cake made with ice during its birthday at a zoo in Nanning, in China’s southern Guangxi region.
EVOLVED. This photo taken on June 27, 2022 shows a panda enjoying a cake made with ice during its birthday at a zoo in Nanning, in China’s southern Guangxi region.

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