Friday 10 January 2020

evolution - Do large animals often evolve into smaller animals?


There are several examples where the largest animals were killed off preferentially due to a major ecological shift:



  • The KT extinction event

  • The Holocene extinction, as well as the major megafauna humans killed off


The common ancestor of modern mammals is thought to be "shrew-like" in size, and it differentiated into most of the large animal species in the world today. I imagine that a similar statement can be made for dinosaurs. In general it seems that a major extinction event is likely to be best weathered by smaller creatures which can later, over time, increase in size to fill the niche that larger animals, and evolution dictates it will be profitable to do so.


Does this limit large animals to only the branches of the tree of life? Any given set of (Multicellular) species obviously share a common ancestor that is much smaller than them. Is it possible for many species to share a common ancestor that is considerably larger than any of them?



Answer



Your question brings up several important issues with regards to the evolution of body size. The rationale for concluding that the ancestral mammal had a small body size is that all of the taxa in that area of the tree tend to be small. In contrast, if all of those taxa had been cow-sized, then the most parsimonious conclusion would be that the ancestral mammal was cow-sized.



Identification of ancestors is difficult


Identification of a fossil species as the most recent common ancestor of a pair of sister taxa is exceedingly difficult. The way that different species are diagnosed in fossils in by their unique derived characteristics (autapomorphies). So if a fossil is found with no autapomorphies, then it is plausibly an ancestor (i.e., at the split between two sister taxa). Some would argue that if you don't find any autapomorphies, then you just haven't looked closely enough.


Cope's Rule


The idea that lineages tend to evolve toward larger body size is known as Cope's Rule, named for the paleontologist Edward Drinker Cope. The success of Cope's Rule has been highly variable, with some lineages following and others not (Polly, 1998).


Some clades following Cope's Rule



Some clades not following Cope's Rule



Note that many results depend on the methods used.


Evidence from experimental evolution



Several studies have addressed body size evolution in vertebrates both directly and indirectly. MacArthur (1944a, 1944b) directly selected for large and small body mass in laboratory mice. Within 8 generations, mean body masses had increased or decreased by over 50%. Even when body mass is not directly selected upon, mass can change in a correlated way. Selection for high levels of voluntary activity has led to an approximately 25% reduction in body mass.


Based on these studies, evolution of body size (larger or smaller) is certainly possible within relatively few generations.


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