When it comes to reproductive senescence, however, there is a difference in the way this affects male and female mammals. Females are born with a finite supply of eggs, although, in practice, this is far more than they will need, so they don't cease to be fertile simply because they run out. What actually triggers the menopause in humans is complex, even assuming no confounding health conditions, but the number of remaining egg follicles falling below a required level and thereby lowering the production of certain hormones is thought to be key.
Sunday, 22 June 2025
Antlers and Ageing
Sunday, 15 June 2025
Delphinids: The Freshwater Dolphins of Brazil
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Tucuxi |
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
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Megistotherium, a Miocene hyena-cat |
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
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Northern bat |
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.
Sunday, 25 May 2025
Delphinids: Dolphins of the Deep Seas
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Rough-toothed dolphin |
While for some dolphin species the only real limitation is pack ice preventing them from surfacing to breathe, most have more specific requirements. Temperature is the most obvious, with some species preferring tropical or subarctic seas, but the depth of the underlying water is also significant. Species such as common and bottlenose dolphins are most comfortable over the continental shelves, where nutrients well up from the sea bed to feed the fish and squid on which they prey. Rather more species prefer shallow waters, close to the coast. Here, the water is shallow enough for light to reach the bottom, allowing seaweed or coral to grow, which benefits a different kind of fish than those further out.
Sunday, 18 May 2025
Sea Lions v. The Blob
When it did, tropical winds pushed the warm water up against the American coast, from southern Alaska to southern Mexico, where it basically sat until El Niño kicked off in 2015... and that kept things unusually warm for another year. Inland, this disrupted weather systems leading, among other things, to frequent thunderstorms that sparked what was (at the time) the worst wildfire season in California's history.
Sunday, 11 May 2025
Oligocene (pt 15): Land of the Fire-Beasts
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Pyrotherium |
Sunday, 4 May 2025
Delphinids: Small Dolphins of Shallow Southern Seas
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Commerson's dolphin |
In 1766, naturalist Philibert Commerson accompanied explorer Louis-Antoine de Bougainville on what would become the first successful French circumnavigation of the globe. While passing through the Straits of Magellan the following year, he spotted an unusual-looking dolphin close to the ship and sent a description of it back to France. (As a side note, later on in the voyage, it was discovered, much to the crew's shock, that Commerson's assistant was secretly a woman; she is now remembered as the first woman to circumnavigate the globe).
Sunday, 27 April 2025
Cheating Little Vixens
Sunday, 20 April 2025
Delphinids: White-sided Dolphins
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Atlantic white-sided dolphin |
The genus was named by John Edward Gray in 1846 for a specimen of a previously unknown species sent to him for analysis at the British Museum, after having been caught somewhere off the coast of Norfolk. It translates as "bottle-nose", for the shape of the beak... which is, perhaps, unfortunate, given that the animal we refer to in English as the "bottlenose dolphin" is something else entirely. Over the centuries since, five new species have been added to the genus, giving us the six we recognise today.
Sunday, 13 April 2025
The Diets of Parallel Pigs
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Peccaries from South America |
Sunday, 6 April 2025
Of Pregnancy and Progesterone
Whether or not other mammals menstruate may depend on your exact definition of the term. Chimpanzees certainly do (and, indeed, rarely experience menopause), and it's present to a variable extent in other apes and Old World monkeys. In New World monkeys it's microscopic and it's completely absent in lemurs. At least some bats menstruate, as do sengis (elephant shrews) and, so far as we know, just one species of rodent.
Saturday, 29 March 2025
The Earliest Landfowl
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Gallinuloides |
The humble chicken (Gallus domesticus) is a member of the pheasant family. This is a moderately-sized family, with around 180 species. Alongside the chicken and its wild ancestor, this also includes, not just pheasants, but many similar ground-dwelling birds, such as grouse, partridges, true quails, turkeys, and peacocks.
It is, in turn, a part of a larger taxonomic group technically referred to as the Galliformes, or more commonly the "landfowl". The other four living families in this order have fewer species and are generally less well-known, but they share the same features of being generally plump, often quite large by avian standards, and having short, rounded wings unsuited for long-distance flight.
Sunday, 23 March 2025
Delphinids: Humpback Dolphins
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Indo-Pacific humpback dolphin |
Our best evidence suggests that it probably isn't a "real" group, in the sense of one consisting of a common ancestor and all of its descendants. That's because three other genera of dolphin appear to be descended from that common ancestor, forming part of the same cluster of what we might describe as "typical-looking" dolphins. The common and bottlenose dolphins form two of these interspersed groups, while the third is represented by the humpback dolphins.
As it turns out, their classification has also had to undergo significant revision in recent years, albeit for different reasons.
Sunday, 16 March 2025
Oligocene (Pt 14): The Southern Horses That Weren't
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Scarritia |
They didn't.
Well, not much. When the name was originally coined, for the Miocene genus Notohippus, back in 1891, it was assumed that they really were horses, or at least closely related. This is because of the shape of their teeth which, did indeed resemble those of equines. It only took until 1914 to realise that, teeth aside, they weren't very horse-like. That their teeth were similar suggests a similar diet with plenty of tough vegetation, and their head was elongated in an almost horse-like fashion to accommodate them... but that's pretty much where the resemblance ends. For one thing, they had claws, not hooves; their bodies were also stockier, albeit with long limbs that may have given them a certain agility.
Sunday, 9 March 2025
Gorilla Communities
There are many factors that we need to consider when attempting to reverse this, and some of them also have a bearing on the evolution of our own species. Among these is the question of how gorilla groups are socially constructed and how they interact. It turns out that here, we can't just consider "gorillas" en masse because the two species behave in very different ways. For example, while one species can have multiple silverback males in the same troop, this is rare (but not unheard of) in the other.
Sunday, 2 March 2025
Delphinids: Spotted, Striped, and Spinning Dolphins
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Pantropical spotted dolphin |
It was first created in 1866 as a subgenus within Steno, the "narrow-beaked" dolphins, and contained just one species. It became a full genus in 1934,and by the end of the 20th century was agreed to contain five species - all of which had, in fact, been named before 1866. Since then, our understanding of genetics has greatly improved, and it has become clear that these various species cannot be so neatly arranged on a family tree as we might like.
Sunday, 23 February 2025
Wolves, Foxes, and Food
But the basic idea holds, and apex predators - those that are large enough that nothing else normally eats them - exist in much smaller numbers than herbivores or smaller carnivores. This means that, relative to their numbers, they have a disproportionate effect on the ecosystem within which they live. Take away the apex predators and, even though there weren't very many of them to begin with, you will radically change the local ecology.
And, because they are relatively few in number, apex predators tend to be especially vulnerable to being wiped out. That's even assuming that humans don't focus on them deliberately out of fear, whether for their own lives or for the good of their livestock. Globally, apex predators are declining. (On this blog, we're mostly interested in mammals, but consider, for example, that at least eight of the 23 species of crocodile/alligator are currently thought to be endangered).
Sunday, 16 February 2025
When Snow Leopards Reached Portugal
The snow leopard was first scientifically described by Johann Schreber in 1775 as a member of the genus Felis. The differences from other cats were sufficient that, in 1854, John Edward Gray proposed that it be given its own genus, Uncia. His original definition of the genus did not stand (it also included at least one species of "purring cat"), but it was resurrected again in the early 20th century, and used solely for snow leopards up until 2006. In that year genetic evidence placed it alongside the other "roaring cats" in Panthera, something that has been amply confirmed since.
Sunday, 9 February 2025
Delphinids: Common and Bottlenose Dolphins
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Common dolphin |
So much so in fact, that by the time we reach the 21st century, only one species remains in the genus originally created to contain all dolphins and dolphin-like animals. That species is, of course, the one that we believe Linnaeus happened to be thinking of when he named the genus, and therefore is the defining (or 'type') species not only for its genus but for the dolphin family as a whole. This is the aptly named common dolphin (Delphinus delphis).
Saturday, 1 February 2025
Call of the Mole Vole
Most obviously different from regular voles are the giant species. Although genetic data shows us that these are voles, in the sense of being offshoots of the vole family tree rather than something distinct, we don't normally refer to them as such in English. Instead, we call them "lemmings" or, in the case of the very largest species, "muskrats". To avoid potential confusion, in more scientific language we would therefore use the taxonomic name when referring to the subfamily as a whole and say that voles, lemmings, and muskrats collectively are "arvicolines".
Sunday, 26 January 2025
Delphinid Dolphins
Technically known as the Delphinidae, this was named by John Edward Gray in 1821 as part of one of the earliest formal lists of mammal families. Gray's original definition basically included all toothed cetaceans other than narwhals and sperm whales, encompassing four genera, only one of which is still placed in the family today - Delphinus, from which it takes its name. He didn't list how many species he thought that genus contained, but it would certainly have included the two named by Linnaeus in 1758, and probably at least three others that had been described in the interim. Over the following decades, the number expanded considerably, with Gray himself identifying several of them, notably when he catalogued the observations and specimens collected by the Ross Expedition of 1839-43.
Sunday, 19 January 2025
Oligocene (Pt 13): The First Porcupines
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Prosotherium |
Sunday, 12 January 2025
The Struggles of a Pollinating Bat
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Note the dusting of pollen... |
Even aside from the obvious importance that this gives bats to the wider ecosystem, this can also have direct economic importance to we humans. For example, sour pitayas are an important cash crop in parts of Mexico. Similar to the much sweeter dragonfruit (although not closely related), they grow on a particular type of cactus that is native to the country but is also commonly cultivated. As it turns out, this cactus relies on bats for pollination. While they are not essential, crop yields drop by over a third when the bats are prevented from reaching them, which would clearly be devastating for a Mexican farmer who may be living on the edge of profitability to start with.