Sunday 8 September 2024

Antilopine Antelopes: Dwarf Antelopes of southern Africa

Steenbok
The "antilopine" subfamily of antelopes, so named because it happens to include the first animal scientifically described as an antelope rather than a goat, is itself divided into at least two major branches. There may or may not also be minor ones, depending on what you think is worthy of naming, but the two main ones are quite clear, and perhaps separated from one another around 12 million years ago towards the end of the Middle Miocene.

One of these groups contains the gazelles, along with the springbok, some other gazelle-like animals, and that "first" antelope mentioned above, the blackbuck. These are, for the most part, smallish slender, fast-running antelopes living in arid or semi-arid habitats in both Africa and Asia. The second group are the dwarf antelopes, found only in Africa and quite visibly different from gazelles. 

Sunday 1 September 2024

Unravelling the History of Seals

Allodesmus, a desmatophocid
Trying to determine the largest patterns in evolution can be a daunting task. Here, we often want to look at large numbers of species, comparing the living ones and filling in the gaps with fossils that are often incomplete, ambiguous, or that simply haven't been discovered yet. As a result, there are several big transitions in mammalian evolutionary history that we'd like to get a better look at. Bats are a significant case in point; their small fragile skeletons don't preserve well if we want to see more than teeth, and how they developed their forelimbs into wings remains obscure.

With some groups, however, we do have sufficient fossil evidence that we can look at a whole group of animals and get some idea, not just of how it originated, or where it fits in the larger mammalian family tree, but what ups and downs it has faced over the course of its existence. This can tell us what alterations in climate or geography drove changes within the group and how and when particularly evolutionary innovations developed.