Sunday, 15 March 2026

The Patagonian Homunculus

In 1891, Argentinian naturalist Florentino Ameghino, the founding father of South American palaeontology, described a new species of fossil primate. Naming it Homunculus ("little man"), he recognised that it resembled a lemur almost as much as a monkey and must therefore be very primitive, but he was unable to categorise it further.

To be fair, all he had at the time was a section of the lower jaw. Over the next seven years, working with his brother Carlos, he uncovered a few further specimens. These included part of a skull and some limb bones, but the exact details of what they had discovered remained obscure, beyond the fact that it was a primate of some sort.

It didn't help that, after 1898, the next discovery of a fossil belonging to the genus didn't happen until the 1980s. And that was only a few isolated teeth. Since then, nothing until the current century.

Sunday, 8 March 2026

Black Bears and the Uncertain Apex

The concept of the food pyramid is a central one in ecology. The idea is that since consumption cannot ever be 100% efficient, every type of animal must necessarily be less common than whatever it is that it feed on, at least in terms of its total biomass. Plants are more common than herbivores are more common than small carnivores are more common than larger carnivores.

The actual picture is more complicated than this. Many "carnivores" are at least partly omnivorous, and they often eat large herbivores more regularly than they eat small carnivores. Plus, we also need to consider the detritivores and parasites. But the general pattern holds, and at the top of the pyramid, we find the apex predators

It's possible to argue as to what exactly constitutes an apex predator. The general idea, however, is that they feed on other animals without being preyed upon themselves. At least among terrestrial mammals, an average body mass of more than about 15 kg (33 lbs) is generally about enough that predators need to manage their own population (through competition, territoriality, infanticide, etc.) rather than having to worry about something larger and scarier managing it for them. 

Sunday, 1 March 2026

Viverrids: Half-Weasel Palm Civets

Banded palm civet
The word "civet", as currently used in English, is a rather broad term, referring to a wide range of vaguely similar-looking animals. Not all of these are even members of the "civet family" as we currently understand it, and even those that are don't form a natural biological group within that family. 

The word was originally Arabic (pronounced something like "zabad") and would have referred to the animals that medieval Arabs were familiar with, which, given how far they traded, would have included both African and South Asian species. These are still regarded as "true civets" today, but the word now also appears in the name of the "palm civets", long thought to be merely a variant of the true sort.