The Scotsman

Study of fossil teeth reveals the impact of climate change

● Structure of food chains under the sea much the same as Jurassic period

- By ANGUS HOWARTH

A study of fossilised teeth has shed new light on how reptiles adapted to changing seas more than 150 million years ago.

Palaeontol­ogists at the University of Edinburgh found marine predators living in deep waters during the Jurassic period thrived as sea levels rose, while species that lived in the shallows died out. The research reveals how the structure of food chains beneath the sea has remained largely unchanged since the Jurassic era.

The team analysed the shape and size of teeth spanning an 18 million-year period during which diverse reptiles lived in tropical waters stretching from present-day northern France to Yorkshire.

They found species belonged to one of five groups based on their teeth, diet and which part of the ocean they inhabited.

They found as global sea levels rose, species that lived in shallow waters and caught fish using thin, piercing teeth declined drasticall­y.

Larger species in deeper, open waters with broader teeth for crunching and cutting prey began to thrive.

These species may have benefited from major changes in ocean temperatur­e and chemical make-up, which could have increased levels of nutrients and prey in deep waters.

The study, which also involved the University of Bris-

0 Artist’s impression of marine predators that lived in deep waters during the Jurassic period

tol, could shed light on how species at the top of marine food chains today might respond to rapid environmen­tal changes such as climate change, pollution and rising temperatur­es. Study leader Davide Foffa, from the University

of Edinburgh’s School of Geoscience­s, said: “Studying the evolution of these animals was a real and rare treat and has offered a simple yet powerful explanatio­n for why some species declined as others prospered. This work

reminds us of the relevance of palaeontol­ogy by revealing the parallels between past and present-day ocean ecosystems.”

Colleague Dr Steve Brusatte added: “Teeth are humble fossils, but they reveal a grand sto- ry of how sea reptiles evolved over millions of years as their environmen­ts changed.

“Changes in these Jurassic reptiles parallel changes in dolphins and other marine species that are occurring today as sea levels rise.”

 ?? PICTURE: NIKOLAY ZVERKOV/SWNS ??
PICTURE: NIKOLAY ZVERKOV/SWNS

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