Sunday, 15 June 2025

Delphinids: The Freshwater Dolphins of Brazil

Tucuxi
In this series so far, I have generally been referring to the Delphinidae as the "dolphin family". That's a literal translation of the name and serves to distinguish it from, say, the porpoise family. However, as I mentioned in the first post, not all animals commonly referred to as "dolphins" belong in the family. Thus, when zoologists want to distinguish the family from those other animals, but want to avoid saying "delphinids", the more common term is "Oceanic dolphins". Oceans are, after all, where they are found.

With, it turns out, one exception.

The tucuxi (Sotalia fluviatilis) is unique among Oceanic dolphins is being an exclusively freshwater animal. It lives in the Amazon River and its major tributaries, mostly in Brazil, but also further upstream into Colombia, Peru, and Ecuador. Indeed, it was first formally described, by Paul Gervais in 1853, from an animal sighted in Peru, about 2,500 km (1,500 miles) from the mouth of the Amazon... and they are known to get further upriver than that, until they are stopped by features such as waterfalls.

Sunday, 8 June 2025

Bast, Sekhmet, and the Egyptian Hyena-cats

Megistotherium, a Miocene hyena-cat
The majority of the land-based mammalian predators we are familiar with today belong to the order Carnivora. This is a diverse order, including such mammal families as the cats, bears, dogs, weasels, and seals. In fact, if we ignore the cetaceans and a few kinds of marsupial, they are the only large carnivorous mammals alive. But, as so often, this was not always the case, and they once shared the world with at least three other orders of predatory placental mammal (plus some marsupials far more fearsome than any Tasmanian devil). 

Two of these orders died out relatively early on, but one of them survived for much longer, producing multiple diverse species that lived across Eurasia, North America, and Africa. These were the hyaenodonts, named for Hyaenodon itself, first identified from a fossil all the way back in 1838. With so many species, they must have been successful in their day, but their numbers declined until the last two species died out in Africa and India around 9 million years ago, perhaps due to competition from the carnivorans, perhaps due to long-term climate change. Or, more likely, both.

Sunday, 1 June 2025

I Ain't Afraid of No Owls

Northern bat
There is no particular reason why bats should be nocturnal. True, nocturnality has many advantages, but so does daytime activity; the real question is why so few bats fly during the day. I looked at this last year, where I mentioned that one of the main theories is that since birds evolved flight before bats did, the bats originally flew at night so that daytime predators, such as hawks and eagles, didn't try to eat them.

If so, it may be an effective strategy, since there isn't very much that eats bats on a regular basis. That isn't to say that there isn't anything, however. The bat hawk is, as its name implies, probably the single most specialised bat predator, but studies in Africa have shown that hobbies (which overwinter there), Wahlberg's eagles, and African goshawks also attack bats with some frequency, and they're probably not alone. In this part of the world, bats, as one might expect, take measures to reduce their risk of attack. Flying in large flocks may help, but it's also known, for example, that they avoid flying on moonlit nights, and, when they have to, they don't fly above the trees as they normally would, keeping themselves out of view.