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Thursday, September 19, 2024

Study links higher animal body temperatures with increased likelihoods for evolving into plant-eaters

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Mike Candrea Interim Athletic Director | Arizona Wildcats Website

Mike Candrea Interim Athletic Director | Arizona Wildcats Website

A University of Arizona study has uncovered a surprising relationship between an animal's body temperature and its likelihood of evolving into an herbivore. The study, published Monday in the journal Global Ecology and Biogeography, offers fresh insights into the evolution of plant-based diets across tetrapods, which include amphibians, birds, reptiles, and mammals. The findings could reshape scientists' understanding of the evolution of animal diets.

The study analyzed data from 1,712 species and found a consistent pattern: Animals with higher body temperatures are more likely to evolve into herbivores. This relationship holds true across major land vertebrate groups.

The relationship between body temperature and herbivory is linked to the unique digestive challenges posed by a plant-based diet, said senior study author John Wiens, a professor of ecology and evolutionary biology at the University of Arizona.

Higher body temperatures may be necessary to support the gut bacteria that break down cellulose, the primary component of plant cell walls. The relationship between an animal's body temperature and its gut microbiome could be key to understanding why certain species are better equipped to adopt and maintain herbivorous diets, Wiens said.

"We were specifically interested in body temperature because it is one of the most widespread and comparable factors that might determine diet across different groups of animals," said Kristen Saban, the study's lead author. Saban was a University of Arizona sophomore majoring in ecology and evolutionary biology when she began the study.

The research team conducted extensive analyses examining various other factors that might influence the evolution of diet, including body size and day or night activity patterns. Body temperature ultimately emerged as the most crucial factor in predicting the evolution of an herbivorous diet.

"What we found was that body temperature is somewhat of a requirement to evolve an herbivorous diet. We really didn't see any herbivores that don't have a high body temperature. Typically, the body temperature was more than 86 degrees Fahrenheit," Saban said.

Some previous studies have looked at how an herbivorous diet may have influenced the evolution of body temperature in animals, Saban said. This study looked at it differently by attempting to find what factors drove the evolution of herbivory.

The researchers compiled relevant data from dozens of previous studies for their analyses. The study also sheds light on the evolutionary timeline of herbivory. Contrary to expectations given today's prevalence of plant-eating animals, herbivory appears relatively recent according to Wiens. Tetrapods are ancestrally carnivorous; for example, lizards had meat as a significant part of their diet while iguanas evolved to be herbivores. Herbivorous groups existing now are all less than 110 million years old despite tetrapods being around for 350 million years.

This timing coincides with flowering plants – angiosperms – becoming dominant around 110 million years ago; they now constitute about 90% of all plant species. Overall, these findings open new avenues for future research considering older herbivorous lineages like dinosaurs haven't persisted today according to Wiens.

The study also revealed that herbivory is unstable in evolutionary terms as numerous instances showed species reverting from herbivory back to carnivory such as Latin America's singing mice evolving from their ancestors who fed mostly on insects rather than plants again—Saban noted this instability remains unknown once evolved doesn't necessarily stick around very long observed reversals just common origins possible some current-day groups feeding animals once more per Wiens

 

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