
pmid: 33046697
pmc: PMC7550344
Abstract There is uncertainty regarding the timing and fossil species in which mammalian endothermy arose, with few studies of stem-mammals on key aspects of endothermy such as basal or maximum metabolic rates, or placing them in the context of living vertebrate metabolic ranges. Synchrotron X-ray imaging of incremental tooth cementum shows two Early Jurassic stem-mammals, Morganucodon and Kuehneotherium , had lifespans (a basal metabolic rate proxy) considerably longer than comparably sized living mammals, but similar to reptiles. Morganucodon also had femoral blood flow rates (a maximum metabolic rate proxy) intermediate between living mammals and reptiles. This shows maximum metabolic rates increased evolutionarily before basal rates, and that contrary to previous suggestions of a Triassic origin, Early Jurassic stem-mammals lacked the endothermic metabolism of living mammals. One Sentence Summary Surprisingly long lifespans and low femoral blood flow suggest reptile-like physiology in key Early Jurassic stem-mammals.
PHASE CONTRAST, 570, THERAPSIDS, Science, 610, BIOLOGY, 610 Medicine & health, Article, Animal physiology, Animals, ADAPTIVE SIGNIFICANCE, PALEONTOLOGY, History, Ancient, Phylogeny, Mammals, ENDOTHERMY, palaeontology, ORIGIN, PHASE CONTRAST MICROTOMOGRAPHY, Fossils, Tomography, X-Ray, Q, BONE-HISTOLOGY, Reptiles, BODY-MASS, Biological Evolution, EVOLUTION, animal physiology, 560 Fossils & prehistoric life, METABOLIC-RATE, Ecology, evolutionary biology, Genetics, developmental biology, physiology, GROWTH, RADIATION, Basal Metabolism, FOSSIL BONE, Tooth
PHASE CONTRAST, 570, THERAPSIDS, Science, 610, BIOLOGY, 610 Medicine & health, Article, Animal physiology, Animals, ADAPTIVE SIGNIFICANCE, PALEONTOLOGY, History, Ancient, Phylogeny, Mammals, ENDOTHERMY, palaeontology, ORIGIN, PHASE CONTRAST MICROTOMOGRAPHY, Fossils, Tomography, X-Ray, Q, BONE-HISTOLOGY, Reptiles, BODY-MASS, Biological Evolution, EVOLUTION, animal physiology, 560 Fossils & prehistoric life, METABOLIC-RATE, Ecology, evolutionary biology, Genetics, developmental biology, physiology, GROWTH, RADIATION, Basal Metabolism, FOSSIL BONE, Tooth
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