核心概念
Early mammaliaforms, such as the Middle Jurassic docodontan Krusatodon, exhibited a prolonged life history with slower growth and longer maximum lifespan compared to modern small mammals.
要約
The content provides insights into the life history of early mammaliaforms, specifically the Middle Jurassic docodontan Krusatodon, based on the analysis of exceptionally complete juvenile and adult specimens.
Key highlights:
- The adult Krusatodon specimen was about 7 years old at the time of death, while the juvenile was 7 to 24 months old and in the process of replacing its deciduous dentition with the final, adult generation.
- When compared to a dataset of life history parameters for extant mammals, the relative sequence of adult tooth eruption in Krusatodon was already established and within the range observed in modern mammals.
- However, this developmental process was prolonged, taking place over a significantly longer maximum lifespan than extant mammals of comparable adult body mass (156 g or less).
- The findings suggest that early diverging mammaliaforms did not experience the same rapid juvenile growth and shorter lifespan as modern small-bodied mammals, and the fundamental shift to this life history pattern may have occurred later, during or after the Middle Jurassic.
統計
The adult Krusatodon specimen was about 7 years old at the time of death.
The juvenile Krusatodon specimen was 7 to 24 months old at the time of death.
The adult Krusatodon had a body mass of 156 g or less.
引用
"The adult was about 7 years and the juvenile 7 to 24 months of age at death and in the process of replacing its deciduous dentition with its final, adult generation."
"When analysed against a dataset of life history parameters for extant mammals5, the relative sequence of adult tooth eruption was already established in Krusatodon and in the range observed in extant mammals but this development was prolonged, taking place during a longer period as part of a significantly longer maximum lifespan than extant mammals of comparable adult body mass (156 g or less)."