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{{short description|Large or giant animals}}
{{short description|Large animals}}
{{about|living or extinct large sticky bum odor or giant animals}}
{{about|living or extinct large animals}}
{{cs1 config|name-list-style=vanc}}
[[File:Elephant near ndutu.jpg|thumb|right|The [[African bush elephant]], Earth's largest extant land animal]]
[[File:Ngorongoro Crater, Tanzania (2288421918).jpg|thumb|320px|The [[African bush elephant]] (foreground), Earth's largest extant land animal, and the [[Masai ostrich]] (background), one of Earth's largest extant birds]]
In terrestrial [[zoology]], the '''megafauna''' (from [[Ancient Greek|Greek]] μέγας ''megas'' "large" and [[New Latin]] ''[[fauna]]'' "animal life") comprises the large or giant animals of an area, habitat, or geological period, extinct and/or extant. The most common thresholds used are weight over {{convert|46|kg|lb|sigfig=1}}<ref name = "Stuart">{{Cite journal | last = Stuart | first = A. J. | title = Mammalian extinctions in the Late Pleistocene of northern Eurasia and North America | journal = [[Biological Reviews]] | volume = 66 | issue = 4 | pages = 453–562 | date = November 1991 | doi = 10.1111/j.1469-185X.1991.tb01149.x | pmid=1801948| s2cid = 41295526 }}</ref><ref name="MartinKlein1984">{{cite book|author1-last= Martin|author1-first= P. S.|contribution= Prehistoric overkill: The global model|editor1-last= Martin|editor1-first= P. S.|editor2-first= R. G.|editor2-last= Klein|title=Quaternary Extinctions: A Prehistoric Revolution|contribution-url= https://books.google.com/books?id=qIDC7ybvHQEC&pg=PA354|year= 1984|publisher= University of Arizona Press|isbn= 978-0-8165-1100-6|pages= 354–403|oclc= 258362030}}</ref><ref name = "islands&continents">{{Cite book | last1 = Martin | first1 = P. S. | author-link = Paul S. Martin | last2 = Steadman | first2 = D. W. | author2-link = David Steadman | editor-last = MacPhee | editor-first = R. D. E | title = Extinctions in near time: causes, contexts and consequences | place = New York | publisher = Kluwer/Plenum | series = Advances in Vertebrate Paleobiology | volume = 2 | date = 1999-06-30 | chapter = Prehistoric extinctions on islands and continents | chapter-url = https://books.google.com/books?id=UZLuF1YXYTcC&pg=PA17 | pages = 17–56 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=UZLuF1YXYTcC | isbn = 978-0-306-46092-0 | oclc = 41368299 | access-date = 2011-08-23 }} see page 17</ref> (i.e., having a mass comparable to or larger than a [[human]]) or over a [[tonne]], {{convert|1000|kg|lb|0}}<ref name = "Stuart"/><ref>{{cite book|authors=Richard A. Farina, Sergio F. Vizcaino, Gerry De Iuliis|year=2013|title=Megafauna: Giant Beasts of Pleistocene South America|publisher=Indiana University Press, Bloomington, Indiana|isbn=978-0-253-00230-3|chapter=The Great American Biotic Interchange|page=150}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|authors=Bernhard A. Huber, Bradley J. Sinclair, Karl-Heinz Lampe|year=2005|title=African Biodiversity: Molecules, Organisms, Ecosystems|publisher=Springer|isbn=978-0387243153|chapter=Historical Determinants of Mammal Species in Africa|page=294}}</ref> (i.e., having a mass comparable to or larger than an [[Ox|ox]]). The first of these include many species not popularly thought of as overly large, and being the only few large animals left in a given range/area, such as [[white-tailed deer]], [[thomson's gazelle]], and [[red kangaroo]].
In [[zoology]], '''megafauna''' (from [[Ancient Greek|Greek]] μέγας ''megas'' "large" and [[Neo-Latin]] ''[[fauna]]'' "animal life") are large animals. The precise definition of the term varies widely, though a common threshold is approximately {{Convert|45|kg}}, with other thresholds as low as {{Convert|10|kg|lb}} or as high as {{Convert|1,000|kg|lb}}. Large body size is generally associated with other traits, such as having a slow rate of reproduction and, in large herbivores, reduced or negligible adult mortality from being killed by predators.
In practice, the most common usage encountered in academic and popular writing describes land mammals roughly larger than a human that are not (solely) domesticated. The term is especially associated with the [[Pleistocene megafauna]] – the land animals often larger than their extant counterparts that are considered archetypical of [[Quaternary glaciation|the last ice age]], such as [[mammoth]]s, the majority of which in northern Eurasia, the Americas and [[Australian megafauna|Australia]] became extinct within the last forty thousand years.<ref>[http://www.museum.state.il.us/exhibits/larson/ice_age_animals.html# Ice Age Animals]. Illinois State Museum</ref> Among living animals, the term megafauna is most commonly used for the largest [[extant taxon|extant]] terrestrial mammals, which includes (but is not limited to) [[elephant]]s, [[giraffe]]s, [[hippopotamus]]es, [[rhinoceros]]es, and large [[bovines]]. Of these five categories of large herbivores, only [[bovine]]s are presently found outside of [[Africa]] and southern [[Asia]], but all the others were formerly more wide-ranging, with their ranges and populations continually shrinking and decreasing over time. Wild [[equines]] are another example of megafauna, but their current ranges are largely restricted to the old world, specifically Africa and Asia. Megafaunal species may be categorized according to their dietary type: megaherbivores (e.g., [[elephants]]), megacarnivores (e.g., [[lion]]s), and, more rarely, megaomnivores (e.g., [[bear]]s). Megafauna are also categorized by the order of animals that they belong to, which are mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, fish, and invertebrates.


Megafauna species have considerable effects on their local environment, including the suppression of the growth of woody vegetation and a consequent reduction in [[wildfire]] frequency. Megafauna also play a role in regulating and stabilizing the abundance of smaller animals.
Other common uses are for giant aquatic species, especially [[whales]], as well as any of the larger wild or domesticated land animals such as larger [[antelope]], [[deer]], [[horse]] and [[cattle]], as well as [[dinosaur]]s and other extinct giant reptilians.


During the [[Pleistocene]], megafauna were diverse across the globe, with most continental ecosystems exhibiting similar or greater [[species richness]] in megafauna as compared to ecosystems in Africa today. During the [[Late Pleistocene]], particularly from around 50,000 years ago onwards, [[Late Pleistocene extinctions|most large mammal species became extinct]], including 80% of all mammals greater than {{Convert|1,000|kg|lb}}, while small animals were largely unaffected. This pronouncedly size-biased extinction is otherwise unprecedented in the geological record. Humans and climatic change have been implicated by most authors as the likely causes, though the relative importance of either factor has been the subject of significant controversy.
The term megafauna is very rarely used to describe invertebrates, though it has occasionally been used for some species of invertebrates such as [[coconut crab]]s and [[Japanese spider crab]]s, as well as extinct invertebrates that were much larger than all similar invertebrate species alive today, for example [[Meganisoptera|the {{convert|1|m|ft|0|abbr=on}} dragonflies]] of the [[Carboniferous]] period.

== History ==
One of the earliest occurrences of the term "megafauna" is [[Alfred Russel Wallace]]'s 1876 work ''The geographical distribution of animals''. He described the animals as "the hugest, and fiercest, and strangest forms". In the 20th and 21st centuries, the term usually refers to large animals. There are variations in thresholds used to define megafauna as a whole or certain groups of megafauna. Many scientific literature adopt [[Paul Schultz Martin|Paul S. Martin]]'s proposed threshold of {{Convert|45|kg}} to classify animals as megafauna. However, for freshwater species, {{Convert|30|kg}} is the preferred threshold. Some scientists define herbivorous terrestrial megafauna as having a weight exceeding {{Convert|100|kg}}, and terrestrial carnivorous megafauna as more than {{Convert|15|kg}}. Additionally, Owen-Smith coined the term [[megaherbivore]] to describe herbivores that weighed over {{Convert|1000|kg}}, which has seen some use by other researchers.<ref name=":1">{{Cite journal |last1=Moleón |first1=Marcos |last2=Sánchez-Zapata |first2=José A. |last3=Donázar |first3=José A. |last4=Revilla |first4=Eloy |last5=Martín-López |first5=Berta |last6=Gutiérrez-Cánovas |first6=Cayetano |last7=Getz |first7=Wayne M. |last8=Morales-Reyes |first8=Zebensui |last9=Campos-Arceiz |first9=Ahimsa |last10=Crowder |first10=Larry B. |last11=Galetti |first11=Mauro |last12=González-Suárez |first12=Manuela |last13=He |first13=Fengzhi |last14=Jordano |first14=Pedro |last15=Lewison |first15=Rebecca |date=2020-03-11 |title=Rethinking megafauna |url=https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/rspb.2019.2643 |journal=Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences |language=en |volume=287 |issue=1922 |pages=20192643 |doi=10.1098/rspb.2019.2643 |issn=0962-8452 |hdl-access=free |hdl=2263/79439}}</ref>

Among living animals, the term megafauna is most commonly used for the largest [[extant taxon|extant]] terrestrial mammals, which includes (but is not limited to) [[elephant]]s, [[giraffe]]s, [[hippopotamus]]es, [[rhinoceros]]es, and larger [[bovines]]. Of these five categories of large herbivores, only bovines are presently found outside of [[Africa]] and [[Asia]], but all the others were formerly more wide-ranging, with their ranges and populations continually shrinking and decreasing over time. Wild [[equines]] are another example of megafauna, but their current ranges are largely restricted to the [[Old World]], specifically in Africa and Asia. Megafaunal species may be categorized according to their dietary type: [[herbivores|megaherbivores]] (e.g., [[elephants]]), [[carnivores|megacarnivores]] (e.g., [[lion]]s), and [[omnivores|megaomnivores]] (e.g., [[bear]]s).<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Malhi |first1=Yadvinder |last2=Doughty |first2=Christopher E. |last3=Galetti |first3=Mauro |last4=Smith |first4=Felisa A. |last5=Svenning |first5=Jens-Christian |last6=Terborgh |first6=John W. |date=2016-01-26 |title=Megafauna and ecosystem function from the Pleistocene to the Anthropocene |journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences |language=en |volume=113 |issue=4 |pages=838–846 |doi=10.1073/pnas.1502540113 |doi-access=free |issn=0027-8424 |pmc=4743772 |pmid=26811442|bibcode=2016PNAS..113..838M }}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last1=McClenachan |first1=Loren |last2=Cooper |first2=Andrew B. |last3=Dulvy |first3=Nicholas K. |date=2016-06-20 |title=Rethinking Trade-Driven Extinction Risk in Marine and Terrestrial Megafauna |journal=Current Biology |volume=26 |issue=12 |pages=1640–1646 |doi=10.1016/j.cub.2016.05.026 |issn=1879-0445 |pmid=27291051|bibcode=2016CBio...26.1640M |doi-access=free }}</ref>


==Ecological strategy==
==Ecological strategy==
Megafauna – in the sense of the largest mammals and birds – are generally [[R/K selection theory|K-strategist]]s, with high longevity, slow population growth rates, low mortality rates, and (at least for the largest) few or no natural predators capable of killing adults.<ref>https://www.britannica.com/science/K-selected-species. ''Britannica.'' Retrieved 2017-4-2.</ref> These characteristics, although not exclusive to such megafauna, make them vulnerable to human [[overexploitation]], in part because of their slow population recovery rates.<ref name="Barnosky2004">{{cite journal|last1= Barnosky|first1=A. D.|title=Assessing the Causes of Late Pleistocene Extinctions on the Continents|journal= Science|volume= 306|issue=5693|date= 2004-10-01|pages= 70–75|doi= 10.1126/science.1101476|pmid=15459379|bibcode=2004Sci...306...70B|citeseerx=10.1.1.574.332|s2cid=36156087}}</ref><ref name="Brook2006">{{cite journal|last1= Brook|first1=B. W.|last2=Johnson|first2=C. N.|title=Selective hunting of juveniles as a cause of the imperceptible overkill of the Australian Pleistocene megafauna|journal= Alcheringa: An Australasian Journal of Palaeontology|volume= 30|issue= sup1|date= 2006|pages= 39–48|doi=10.1080/03115510609506854|s2cid=84205755}}</ref>
Megafauna animals – in the sense of the largest mammals and birds – are generally [[K-strategists|''K''-strategists]], with high longevity, slow population growth rates, low mortality rates, and (at least for the largest) few or no natural predators capable of killing adults.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Johnson |first=C. N. |date=2002-11-07 |title=Determinants of loss of mammal species during the Late Quaternary 'megafauna' extinctions: life history and ecology, but not body size |journal=Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences |language=en |volume=269 |issue=1506 |pages=2221–2227 |doi=10.1098/rspb.2002.2130 |issn=0962-8452 |pmc=1691151 |pmid=12427315}}</ref><ref name=":1" /> These characteristics, although not exclusive to such megafauna, make them vulnerable to human [[overexploitation]], in part because of their slow population recovery rates.<ref name="Barnosky2004">{{cite journal|last1= Barnosky|first1=A. D.|title=Assessing the Causes of Late Pleistocene Extinctions on the Continents|journal= Science|volume= 306|issue=5693|date= 2004-10-01|pages= 70–75|doi= 10.1126/science.1101476|pmid=15459379|bibcode=2004Sci...306...70B|citeseerx=10.1.1.574.332|s2cid=36156087}}</ref><ref name="Brook2006">{{cite journal|last1= Brook|first1=B. W.|last2=Johnson|first2=C. N.|title=Selective hunting of juveniles as a cause of the imperceptible overkill of the Australian Pleistocene megafauna|journal= Alcheringa: An Australasian Journal of Palaeontology|volume= 30|issue= sup1|date= 2006|pages= 39–48|doi=10.1080/03115510609506854|bibcode=2006Alch...30S..39B |s2cid=84205755}}</ref>


==Evolution of large body size==
==Evolution of large body size==
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| title = The Evolution of Maximum Body Size of Terrestrial Mammals
| title = The Evolution of Maximum Body Size of Terrestrial Mammals
| journal = [[Science (journal)|Science]] | volume = 330 | issue = 6008 | pages = 1216–1219
| journal = [[Science (journal)|Science]] | volume = 330 | issue = 6008 | pages = 1216–1219
| date = 2010-11-26 | doi = 10.1126/science.1194830 |pmid=21109666|bibcode = 2010Sci...330.1216S|citeseerx=10.1.1.383.8581|s2cid=17272200}}</ref> Starting from just a few kg before the event, maximum size had reached ~50&nbsp;kg a few million years later, and ~750&nbsp;kg by the end of the [[Paleocene]]. This trend of increasing body mass appears to level off about 40 Ma ago (in the late [[Eocene]]), suggesting that physiological or ecological constraints had been reached, after an increase in body mass of over three orders of magnitude.<ref name = "F.A.Smith"/> However, when considered from the standpoint of rate of size increase per generation, the exponential increase is found to have continued until the appearance of ''[[Indricotherium]]'' 30 Ma ago. (Since generation time scales with ''body mass''<sup>0.259</sup>, increasing generation times with increasing size cause the log mass vs. time plot to curve downward from a linear fit.)<ref name = "Evans2012">{{cite journal
| date = 2010-11-26 | doi = 10.1126/science.1194830 |pmid=21109666|bibcode = 2010Sci...330.1216S|citeseerx=10.1.1.383.8581|s2cid=17272200}}</ref> Starting from just a few kg before the event, maximum size had reached ~{{Convert|50|kg|lb}} a few million years later, and ~{{Convert|750|kg|lb}} by the end of the [[Paleocene]]. This trend of increasing body mass appears to level off about 40 Ma ago (in the late [[Eocene]]), suggesting that physiological or ecological constraints had been reached, after an increase in body mass of over three orders of magnitude.<ref name = "F.A.Smith"/> However, when considered from the standpoint of rate of size increase per generation, the exponential increase is found to have continued until the appearance of ''[[Indricotherium]]'' 30 Ma ago. (Since generation time scales with ''body mass''<sup>0.259</sup>, increasing generation times with increasing size cause the log mass vs. time plot to curve downward from a linear fit.)<ref name = "Evans2012">{{cite journal
| last1=Evans|first1=A. R.|last2=Jones|first2=D.|last3=Boyer|first3=A. G.|last4=Brown|first4=J. H.|last5=Costa|first5=D. P.|last6=Ernest|first6=S. K. M.|last7=Fitzgerald|first7=E. M. G.|last8=Fortelius|first8=M.|last9=Gittleman|first9=J. L.|last10=Hamilton|first10=M. J.|last11=Harding|first11=L. E.|last12=Lintulaakso|first12=K.|last13=Lyons|first13=S. K.|last14=Okie|first14=J. G.|last15=Saarinen|first15=J. J.|last16=Sibly|first16=R. M.|last17=Smith|first17=F. A.|last18=Stephens|first18=P. R.|last19=Theodor|first19=J. M.|last20=Uhen|first20=M. D.
| last1=Evans|first1=A. R.|last2=Jones|first2=D.|last3=Boyer|first3=A. G.|last4=Brown|first4=J. H.|last5=Costa|first5=D. P.|last6=Ernest|first6=S. K. M.|last7=Fitzgerald|first7=E. M. G.|last8=Fortelius|first8=M.|last9=Gittleman|first9=J. L.|last10=Hamilton|first10=M. J.|last11=Harding|first11=L. E.|last12=Lintulaakso|first12=K.|last13=Lyons|first13=S. K.|last14=Okie|first14=J. G.|last15=Saarinen|first15=J. J.|last16=Sibly|first16=R. M.|last17=Smith|first17=F. A.|last18=Stephens|first18=P. R.|last19=Theodor|first19=J. M.|last20=Uhen|first20=M. D.
| title = The maximum rate of mammal evolution | journal = [[Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|PNAS]]
| title = The maximum rate of mammal evolution | journal = [[Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|PNAS]]
Line 26: Line 31:
| doi = 10.1073/pnas.1120774109 |pmid=22308461|pmc=3306709|bibcode=2012PNAS..109.4187E|doi-access=free}}</ref>
| doi = 10.1073/pnas.1120774109 |pmid=22308461|pmc=3306709|bibcode=2012PNAS..109.4187E|doi-access=free}}</ref>


Megaherbivores eventually attained a body mass of over 10,000&nbsp;kg. The largest of these, [[indricothere]]s and [[proboscid]]s, have been [[hindgut fermentation|hindgut fermenter]]s, which are believed to have an advantage over [[Foregut fermentation|foregut fermenter]]s in terms of being able to accelerate gastrointestinal transit in order to accommodate very large food intakes.<ref name = "Clauss">{{cite journal
Megaherbivores eventually attained a body mass of over {{Convert|10,000|kg|lb}}. The largest of these, [[indricothere]]s and [[proboscid]]s, have been [[hindgut fermentation|hindgut fermenter]]s, which are believed to have an advantage over [[Foregut fermentation|foregut fermenter]]s in terms of being able to accelerate gastrointestinal transit in order to accommodate very large food intakes.<ref name = "Clauss">{{cite journal | last = Clauss | first = M. | author2 = Frey, R. | author3 = Kiefer, B. | author4 = Lechner-Doll, M. | author5 = Loehlein, W. | author6 = Polster, C. | author7 = Roessner, G. E. | author8 = Streich, W. J. | title = The maximum attainable body size of herbivorous mammals: morphophysiological constraints on foregut, and adaptations of hindgut fermenters | journal = [[Oecologia]] | volume = 136 | issue = 1 | pages = 14–27 | date = 2003-04-24 | doi = 10.1007/s00442-003-1254-z | pmid = 12712314 | bibcode = 2003Oecol.136...14C | s2cid = 206989975 | url = http://www.zora.uzh.ch/id/eprint/2393/2/Oecologia_body_size_2003V.pdf | access-date = 2019-07-13 | archive-date = 2019-06-08 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20190608152406/https://www.zora.uzh.ch/id/eprint/2393/2/Oecologia_body_size_2003V.pdf | url-status = dead }}</ref> A similar trend emerges when rates of increase of maximum body mass per generation for different mammalian [[clade]]s are compared (using rates averaged over [[macroevolution]]ary time scales). Among terrestrial mammals, the fastest rates of increase of ''body mass''<sup>0.259</sup> vs. time (in Ma) occurred in [[perissodactyl]]s (a slope of 2.1), followed by [[rodent]]s (1.2) and proboscids (1.1),<ref name = "Evans2012"/> all of which are hindgut fermenters. The rate of increase for [[artiodactyl]]s (0.74) was about a third of the perissodactyls. The rate for [[carnivora]]ns (0.65) was slightly lower yet, while [[primate]]s, perhaps constrained by their [[arboreal]] habits, had the lowest rate (0.39) among the mammalian groups studied.<ref name = "Evans2012"/>
| last = Clauss | first = M.
|author2=Frey, R. |author3=Kiefer, B. |author4=Lechner-Doll, M. |author5=Loehlein, W. |author6=Polster, C. |author7=Roessner, G. E. |author8= Streich, W. J.
| title = The maximum attainable body size of herbivorous mammals: morphophysiological constraints on foregut, and adaptations of hindgut fermenters
| journal = [[Oecologia]] | volume = 136 | issue = 1 | pages = 14–27
| date = 2003-04-24 | doi = 10.1007/s00442-003-1254-z
| pmid=12712314|bibcode=2003Oecol.136...14C| s2cid = 206989975 | url = http://www.zora.uzh.ch/id/eprint/2393/2/Oecologia_body_size_2003V.pdf }}</ref> A similar trend emerges when rates of increase of maximum body mass per generation for different mammalian [[clade]]s are compared (using rates averaged over [[macroevolution]]ary time scales). Among terrestrial mammals, the fastest rates of increase of ''body mass''<sup>0.259</sup> vs. time (in Ma) occurred in [[perissodactyl]]s (a slope of 2.1), followed by [[rodent]]s (1.2) and proboscids (1.1),<ref name = "Evans2012"/> all of which are hindgut fermenters. The rate of increase for [[artiodactyl]]s (0.74) was about a third that of perissodactyls. The rate for [[carnivora]]ns (0.65) was slightly lower yet, while [[primate]]s, perhaps constrained by their [[arboreal]] habits, had the lowest rate (0.39) among the mammalian groups studied.<ref name = "Evans2012"/>


Terrestrial mammalian carnivores from several [[eutheria]]n groups (the [[artiodactyl]] ''[[Andrewsarchus]]'' - formerly considered a [[mesonychid]], the [[oxyaenid]] ''[[Sarkastodon]]'', and the carnivorans ''[[Amphicyon]]'' and ''[[Arctodus]]'') all reached a maximum size of about 1000&nbsp;kg<ref name = "F.A.Smith"/> (the carnivoran ''[[Arctotherium]]'' and the [[hyaenodontid]] ''[[Simbakubwa]]'' may have been somewhat larger). The largest known [[metatheria]]n carnivore, ''[[Proborhyaenidae|Proborhyaena]] gigantea'', apparently reached 600&nbsp;kg, also close to this limit.<ref name = "Sorkin"/> A similar theoretical maximum size for mammalian carnivores has been predicted based on the metabolic rate of mammals, the energetic cost of obtaining prey, and the maximum estimated rate coefficient of prey intake.<ref name = "Carbone">{{cite journal
Terrestrial mammalian carnivores from several [[eutheria]]n groups (the [[artiodactyl]] ''[[Andrewsarchus]]'' formerly considered a [[Mesonychidae|mesonychid]], the [[oxyaenid]] ''[[Sarkastodon]]'', and the carnivorans ''[[Amphicyon]]'' and ''[[Arctodus]]'') all reached a maximum size of about {{Convert|1,000|kg|lb}}<ref name = "F.A.Smith"/> (the carnivoran ''[[Arctotherium]]'' and the [[hyaenodontid]] ''[[Simbakubwa]]'' may have been somewhat larger). The largest known [[metatheria]]n carnivore, ''[[Proborhyaena gigantea]]'', apparently reached {{Convert|600|kg|lb}}, also close to this limit.<ref name = "Sorkin"/> A similar theoretical maximum size for mammalian carnivores has been predicted based on the metabolic rate of mammals, the energetic cost of obtaining prey, and the maximum estimated rate coefficient of prey intake.<ref name = "Carbone">{{cite journal
| last = Carbone | first = C. |author2=Teacher, A |author3=Rowcliffe, J. M.
| last = Carbone | first = C. |author2=Teacher, A |author3=Rowcliffe, J. M.
| title = The Costs of Carnivory | journal = [[PLOS Biology]]
| title = The Costs of Carnivory | journal = [[PLOS Biology]]
| volume = 5 | issue = 2, e22 | pages = 363–368
| volume = 5 | issue = 2, e22 | pages = 363–368
| date = 2007-01-16 | doi = 10.1371/journal.pbio.0050022
| date = 2007-01-16 | doi = 10.1371/journal.pbio.0050022
| pmid=17227145 | pmc=1769424}}</ref> It has also been suggested that maximum size for mammalian carnivores is constrained by the stress the [[humerus]] can withstand at top running speed.<ref name = "Sorkin">{{Cite journal
| pmid=17227145 | pmc=1769424 | doi-access = free }}</ref> It has also been suggested that maximum size for mammalian carnivores is constrained by the stress the [[humerus]] can withstand at top running speed.<ref name = "Sorkin">{{Cite journal
| last = Sorkin | first = B. | title = A biomechanical constraint on body mass in terrestrial mammalian predators
| last = Sorkin | first = B. | title = A biomechanical constraint on body mass in terrestrial mammalian predators
| journal = [[Lethaia]] | volume = 41 | issue = 4 | pages = 333–347
| journal = [[Lethaia]] | volume = 41 | issue = 4 | pages = 333–347
| date = 2008-04-10 | doi = 10.1111/j.1502-3931.2007.00091.x }}</ref>
| date = 2008-04-10 | doi = 10.1111/j.1502-3931.2007.00091.x | bibcode = 2008Letha..41..333S }}</ref>


Analysis of the variation of maximum body size over the last 40 Ma suggests that decreasing temperature and increasing continental land area are associated with increasing maximum body size. The former correlation would be consistent with [[Bergmann's rule]],<ref name = "Ashton">{{cite journal
Analysis of the variation of maximum body size over the last 40 Ma suggests that decreasing temperature and increasing continental land area are associated with increasing maximum body size. The former correlation would be consistent with [[Bergmann's rule]],<ref name = "Ashton">{{cite journal
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===In marine mammals===
===In marine mammals===
[[File:Baleen whale sizes.JPG|thumb|upright=1.5|Baleen whale comparative sizes]]
[[File:Baleen whale sizes.JPG|thumb|upright=1.5|Baleen whale comparative sizes]]
Since tetrapods (first [[Marine reptile|reptiles]], later [[Marine mammal|mammals]]) returned to the sea in the [[Late Permian]], they have dominated the top end of the marine body size range, due to the more efficient intake of oxygen possible using lungs.<ref name = "Webb2015">{{Cite news | last = Webb | first = J. | title = Evolution 'favours bigger sea creatures' | publisher = [[BBC]] | date = 2015-02-19 | url = https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-31533744 | access-date = 2015-02-22 | work = BBC News | archive-date = 2015-02-22 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20150222044708/http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-31533744 | url-status = live }}</ref><ref name = "Helm2015">{{cite journal | last1 = Heim | first1 = N. A. | last2 = Knope | first2 = M. L. | last3 = Schaal | first3 = E. K. | last4 = Wang | first4 = S. C. | last5 = Payne | first5 = J. L. | title = Cope's rule in the evolution of marine animals | journal = Science | volume = 347 | issue = 6224 | pages = 867–870 | doi = 10.1126/science.1260065 | date = 2015-02-20 | pmid = 25700517 | bibcode = 2015Sci...347..867H | url = http://www.swarthmore.edu/NatSci/swang1/Publications/ | doi-access = free | access-date = 2019-07-13 | archive-date = 2019-07-05 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20190705023917/http://www.swarthmore.edu/NatSci/swang1/Publications/ | url-status = live }}</ref> The ancestors of [[cetacea]]ns are believed to have been the semiaquatic [[pakicetid]]s, no larger than dogs, of about 53 million years (Ma) ago.<ref name=poster>{{cite journal|last=Thewissen|first=J. G. M.|author2=Bajpai, S.|title=Whale Origins as a Poster Child for Macroevolution|journal=[[BioScience]]|date=1 January 2001|volume=51|issue=12|pages=1037–1049|doi=10.1641/0006-3568(2001)051[1037:WOAAPC]2.0.CO;2|issn=0006-3568|doi-access=free}}</ref> By 40 Ma ago, cetaceans had attained a length of {{cvt|20|m}} or more in ''[[Basilosaurus]]'', an elongated, serpentine whale that differed from modern whales in many respects and was not ancestral to them. Following this, the evolution of large body size in cetaceans appears to have come to a temporary halt and then to have backtracked, although the available fossil records are limited. However, in the period from 31 Ma ago (in the [[Oligocene]]) to the present, cetaceans underwent a significantly more rapid sustained increase in body mass (a rate of increase in ''body mass''<sup>0.259</sup> of a factor of 3.2 per million years) than achieved by any group of terrestrial mammals.<ref name = "Evans2012"/> This trend led to the largest animal of all time, the modern [[blue whale]]. Several reasons for the more rapid evolution of large body size in cetaceans are possible. Fewer [[Biomechanics|biomechanical]] constraints on increases in body size may be associated with suspension in water as opposed to standing against the force of gravity, and with [[Aquatic locomotion|swimming movements]] as opposed to [[terrestrial locomotion]]. Also, the greater heat capacity and thermal conductivity of water compared to air may increase the [[thermoregulation|thermoregulatory]] advantage of large body size in marine [[endotherm]]s, although diminishing returns apply.<ref name = "Evans2012"/>
Since tetrapods (first [[Marine reptile|reptiles]], later [[Marine mammal|mammals]]) returned to the sea in the Late Permian, they have dominated the top end of the marine body size range, due to the more efficient intake of oxygen possible using lungs.<ref name = "Webb2015">{{Cite news | last = Webb | first = J. | title = Evolution 'favours bigger sea creatures' | publisher = [[BBC]] | date = 2015-02-19 | url = https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-31533744 | access-date = 2015-02-22 | work = BBC News }}</ref><ref name = "Helm2015">{{cite journal
| last1 = Heim | first1 = N. A.
| last2 = Knope | first2 = M. L. | last3 = Schaal | first3 = E. K.
| last4 = Wang | first4 = S. C. | last5 = Payne | first5 = J. L.
| title = Cope's rule in the evolution of marine animals
| journal = Science | volume = 347 | issue = 6224 | pages = 867–870
| doi = 10.1126/science.1260065 | date = 2015-02-20 | pmid=25700517| bibcode = 2015Sci...347..867H| url = http://www.swarthmore.edu/NatSci/swang1/Publications/
| doi-access = free }}</ref> The ancestors of [[cetacea]]ns are believed to have been the semiaquatic [[pakicetid]]s, no larger than dogs, of about 53 million years (Ma) ago.<ref name=poster>{{cite journal|last=Thewissen|first=J. G. M.|author2=Bajpai, S.|title=Whale Origins as a Poster Child for Macroevolution|journal=[[BioScience]]|date=1 January 2001|volume=51|issue=12|pages=1037–1049|doi=10.1641/0006-3568(2001)051[1037:WOAAPC]2.0.CO;2|issn=0006-3568|doi-access=free}}</ref> By 40 Ma ago, cetaceans had attained a length of 20 m or more in ''[[Basilosaurus]]'', an elongated, serpentine whale that differed from modern whales in many respects and was not ancestral to them. Following this, the evolution of large body size in cetaceans appears to have come to a temporary halt, and then to have backtracked, although the available fossil records are limited. However, in the period from 31 Ma ago (in the [[Oligocene]]) to the present, cetaceans underwent a significantly more rapid sustained increase in body mass (a rate of increase in ''body mass''<sup>0.259</sup> of a factor of 3.2 per million years) than achieved by any group of terrestrial mammals.<ref name = "Evans2012"/> This trend led to the largest animal of all time, the modern [[blue whale]]. Several reasons for the more rapid evolution of large body size in cetaceans are possible. Fewer [[Biomechanics|biomechanical]] constraints on increases in body size may be associated with suspension in water as opposed to standing against the force of gravity, and with [[Aquatic locomotion|swimming movements]] as opposed to [[terrestrial locomotion]]. Also, the greater heat capacity and thermal conductivity of water compared to air may increase the [[thermoregulation|thermoregulatory]] advantage of large body size in marine [[endotherm]]s, although diminishing returns apply.<ref name = "Evans2012"/>


Among toothed whales, maximum body size appears to be limited by food availability. Larger size, as in [[sperm whale|sperm]] and [[beaked whale|beaked]] whales, facilitates deeper diving to access relatively easily-caught, large cephalopod prey in a less competitive environment. Compared to odontocetes, the efficiency of baleen whales' [[filter feeding]] scales more favorably with increasing size when planktonic food is dense, making larger size more advantageous. The [[lunge feeding]] technique of [[rorqual]]s appears to be more energy efficient than the [[ram feeding]] of [[balaenid]] whales; the latter technique is used with less dense and patchy plankton.<ref name="Goldbogen2019">{{cite journal|last1= Goldbogen|first1=J. A.|last2= Cade|first2=D. E.|last3= Wisniewska|first3=D. M.|last4= Potvin|first4= J.|last5= Segre|first5=P. S.|last6= Savoca|first6=M. S.|last7= Hazen|first7=E. L.|last8= Czapanskiy|first8=M. F.|last9= Kahane-Rapport|first9=S. R.|last10= DeRuiter|first10=S. L.|last11= Gero|first11= S.|last12= Tønnesen|first12= P.|last13= Gough|first13=W. T.|last14= Hanson|first14=M. B.|last15= Holt|first15=M. M.|last16= Jensen|first16=F. H.|last17= Simon|first17= M.|last18= Stimpert|first18=A. K.|last19= Arranz|first19= P.|last20= Johnston|first20=D. W.|last21= Nowacek|first21=D. P.|last22= Parks|first22=S. E.|last23= Visser|first23= F.|last24= Friedlaender|first24=A. S.|last25= Tyack|first25=P. L.|last26= Madsen|first26=P. T.|last27= Pyenson|first27=N. D.|title= Why whales are big but not bigger: Physiological drivers and ecological limits in the age of ocean giants|journal= Science|volume= 366|issue= 6471|year= 2019|pages= 1367–1372|doi= 10.1126/science.aax9044|pmid=31831666|bibcode=2019Sci...366.1367G|hdl=10023/19285|s2cid=209339266|hdl-access= free}}</ref> The cooling trend in Earth's recent history may have generated more localities of high plankton abundance via wind-driven [[upwelling]]s, facilitating the evolution of gigantic whales.<ref name="Goldbogen2019" />
Among the toothed whales, maximum body size appears to be limited by food availability. Larger size, as in [[sperm whale|sperm]] and [[beaked whale]]s, facilitates deeper diving to access relatively easily-caught, large cephalopod prey in a less competitive environment. Compared to odontocetes, the efficiency of baleen whales' [[filter feeding]] scales more favorably with increasing size when planktonic food is dense, making larger sizes more advantageous. The [[lunge feeding]] technique of [[rorqual]]s appears to be more energy efficient than the [[ram feeding]] of [[balaenid]] whales; the latter technique is used with less dense and patchy plankton.<ref name="Goldbogen2019">{{cite journal|last1= Goldbogen|first1=J. A.|last2= Cade|first2=D. E.|last3= Wisniewska|first3=D. M.|last4= Potvin|first4= J.|last5= Segre|first5=P. S.|last6= Savoca|first6=M. S.|last7= Hazen|first7=E. L.|last8= Czapanskiy|first8=M. F.|last9= Kahane-Rapport|first9=S. R.|last10= DeRuiter|first10=S. L.|last11= Gero|first11= S.|last12= Tønnesen|first12= P.|last13= Gough|first13=W. T.|last14= Hanson|first14=M. B.|last15= Holt|first15=M. M.|last16= Jensen|first16=F. H.|last17= Simon|first17= M.|last18= Stimpert|first18=A. K.|last19= Arranz|first19= P.|last20= Johnston|first20=D. W.|last21= Nowacek|first21=D. P.|last22= Parks|first22=S. E.|last23= Visser|first23= F.|last24= Friedlaender|first24=A. S.|last25= Tyack|first25=P. L.|last26= Madsen|first26=P. T.|author27-link=Nicholas Pyenson|last27= Pyenson|first27=N. D.|title= Why whales are big but not bigger: Physiological drivers and ecological limits in the age of ocean giants|journal= Science|volume= 366|issue= 6471|year= 2019|pages= 1367–1372|doi= 10.1126/science.aax9044|pmid=31831666|bibcode=2019Sci...366.1367G|hdl=10023/19285|s2cid=209339266|hdl-access= free}}</ref> The cooling trend in Earth's recent history may have generated more localities of high plankton abundance via wind-driven [[upwelling]]s, facilitating the evolution of gigantic whales.<ref name="Goldbogen2019" />


Cetaceans are not the only marine mammals to reach tremendous sizes. The largest [[carnivora]]ns of all time are marine [[pinniped]]s, the largest of which is the [[southern elephant seal]], which can reach more than 6 meters in length and weigh up to {{convert|5000|kg|lb}}. Other large pinnipeds include the [[northern elephant seal]] at {{convert|4000|kg|lb}}, [[walrus]] at {{convert|2000|kg|lb}}, and [[Steller sea lion]] at {{convert|1135|kg|lb}}. The [[sirenia]]ns are another group of marine mammals which adapted to fully aquatic life around the same time as the cetaceans did. Sirenians are closely related to elephants. The largest sirenian was the [[Steller's sea cow]], which reached up to 10 meters in length and weighed {{convert|8000|to|10000|kg|lb}}, and was hunted to extinction in the 18th century. The semi-aquatic [[hippopotamus]], which is the terrestrial mammal most closely related to cetaceans, can reach {{convert|3200|kg|lb}}.
Cetaceans are not the only marine mammals to reach tremendous sizes.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Baker |first1=Joanna |last2=Meade |first2=Andrew |last3=Pagel |first3=Mark |last4=Venditti |first4=Chris |date=2015-04-21 |title=Adaptive evolution toward larger size in mammals |journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences |language=en |volume=112 |issue=16 |pages=5093–5098 |doi=10.1073/pnas.1419823112 |doi-access=free |issn=0027-8424 |pmc=4413265 |pmid=25848031|bibcode=2015PNAS..112.5093B }}</ref> The largest mammal [[carnivora]]ns of all time are marine [[pinniped]]s, the largest of which is the [[southern elephant seal]], which can reach more than {{cvt|6|m}} in length and weigh up to {{cvt|5,000|kg}}. Other large pinnipeds include the [[northern elephant seal]] at {{cvt|4,000|kg}}, [[walrus]] at {{cvt|2,000|kg}}, and [[Steller sea lion]] at {{cvt|1,135|kg}}.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Churchill |first1=Morgan |last2=Clementz |first2=Mark T. |last3=Kohno |first3=Naoki |date=2014-12-19 |title=Cope's rule and the evolution of body size in Pinnipedimorpha (Mammalia: Carnivora) |url=|journal=Evolution |volume=69 |issue=1 |pages=201–215 |doi=10.1111/evo.12560 |pmid=25355195 |issn=0014-3820}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Haley |first1=Michael P. |last2=Deutsch |first2=Charles J. |last3=Boeuf |first3=Burney J. Le |date=April 1991 |title=A method for estimating mass of large pinnipeds |url=|journal=Marine Mammal Science |language=en |volume=7 |issue=2 |pages=157–164 |doi=10.1111/j.1748-7692.1991.tb00562.x |bibcode=1991MMamS...7..157H |issn=0824-0469}}</ref> The [[sirenia]]ns are another group of marine mammals which adapted to fully aquatic life around the same time as the cetaceans did. Sirenians are closely related to elephants. The largest sirenian was the [[Steller's sea cow]], which reached up to {{cvt|10|m}} in length and weighed {{cvt|8,000|to|10,000|kg}}, and was hunted to extinction in the 18th century.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Goldbogen |first=J. A. |date=2018-04-17 |title=Physiological constraints on marine mammal body size |journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences |language=en |volume=115 |issue=16 |pages=3995–3997 |doi=10.1073/pnas.1804077115 |doi-access=free |issn=0027-8424 |pmc=5910879 |pmid=29618615|bibcode=2018PNAS..115.3995G }}</ref>


===In flightless birds===
===In flightless birds===
[[File:Dinornithidae SIZE 01.png|thumb|A size comparison between a human and 4 [[moa]] species: {{Clear}} '''1.''' ''[[Dinornis novaezealandiae]]'' {{Clear}} '''2.''' ''[[Emeus crassus]]'' {{Clear}} '''3.''' ''[[Anomalopteryx didiformis]]'' {{Clear}} '''4.''' ''[[Dinornis robustus]]'']]
[[File:Dinornithidae SIZE 01.png|thumb|A size comparison between a human and 4 [[moa]] species: {{Clear}} '''1.''' ''[[Dinornis novaezealandiae]]'' {{Clear}} '''2.''' ''[[Emeus crassus]]'' {{Clear}} '''3.''' ''[[Anomalopteryx didiformis]]'' {{Clear}} '''4.''' ''[[Dinornis robustus]]'']]
Because of the small initial size of all mammals following the extinction of the non-avian dinosaurs, nonmammalian vertebrates had a roughly ten-million-year-long window of opportunity (during the Paleocene) for evolution of gigantism without much competition.<ref name = "Mitchell2014">{{Cite journal | doi = 10.1126/science.1251981| pmid = 24855267| title = Ancient DNA reveals elephant birds and kiwi are sister taxa and clarifies ratite bird evolution| journal = Science| volume = 344| issue = 6186| pages = 898–900| date = 2014-05-23| last1 = Mitchell | first1 = K. J.| last2 = Llamas | first2 = B.| last3 = Soubrier | first3 = J.| last4 = Rawlence | first4 = N. J.| last5 = Worthy | first5 = T. H.| last6 = Wood | first6 = J.| last7 = Lee | first7 = M. S. Y.| last8 = Cooper | first8 = A.| bibcode = 2014Sci...344..898M| hdl = 2328/35953| s2cid = 206555952| url = https://dspace.flinders.edu.au/xmlui/bitstream/2328/35953/1/Mitchell_AncientDNA_AM2014.pdf| hdl-access = free}}</ref> During this interval, [[apex predator]] niches were often occupied by reptiles, such as terrestrial [[crocodilian]]s (e.g. ''[[Pristichampsus]]''), large snakes (e.g. ''[[Titanoboa]]'') or [[varanid lizard]]s, or by flightless birds<ref name = "F.A.Smith"/> (e.g. ''[[Paleopsilopterus]]'' in South America). This is also the period when megafaunal flightless herbivorous [[gastornithid]] birds evolved in the Northern Hemisphere, while flightless [[paleognath]]s evolved to large size on [[Gondwana]]n land masses and [[Europe]]. Gastornithids and at least one lineage of flightless paleognath birds originated in Europe, both lineages dominating niches for large herbivores while mammals remained below 45&nbsp;kg (in contrast with other landmasses like [[North America]] and [[Asia]], which saw the earlier evolution of larger mammals) and were the largest European tetrapods in the [[Paleocene]].<ref name="Buffetaut2014">{{cite journal|last1=Buffetaut|first1=E.|last2=Angst|first2=D.|title=Stratigraphic distribution of large flightless birds in the Palaeogene of Europe and its palaeobiological and palaeogeographical implications|journal=Earth-Science Reviews|volume=138|date=November 2014|pages=394–408|doi=10.1016/j.earscirev.2014.07.001|bibcode=2014ESRv..138..394B}}</ref>
Because of the small initial size of all mammals following the extinction of the non-avian dinosaurs, nonmammalian vertebrates had a roughly ten-million-year-long window of opportunity (during the Paleocene) for evolution of gigantism without much competition.<ref name = "Mitchell2014">{{Cite journal| doi = 10.1126/science.1251981| pmid = 24855267| title = Ancient DNA reveals elephant birds and kiwi are sister taxa and clarifies ratite bird evolution| journal = Science| volume = 344| issue = 6186| pages = 898–900| date = 2014-05-23| last1 = Mitchell| first1 = K. J.| last2 = Llamas| first2 = B.| last3 = Soubrier| first3 = J.| last4 = Rawlence| first4 = N. J.| last5 = Worthy| first5 = T. H.| last6 = Wood| first6 = J.| last7 = Lee| first7 = M. S. Y.| last8 = Cooper| first8 = A.| bibcode = 2014Sci...344..898M| hdl = 2328/35953| s2cid = 206555952| url = https://dspace.flinders.edu.au/xmlui/bitstream/2328/35953/1/Mitchell_AncientDNA_AM2014.pdf| hdl-access = free| access-date = 2019-09-24| archive-date = 2023-03-15| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20230315211934/https://dspace.flinders.edu.au/xmlui/bitstream/2328/35953/1/Mitchell_AncientDNA_AM2014.pdf| url-status = live}}</ref> During this interval, [[apex predator]] niches were often occupied by reptiles, such as terrestrial [[crocodilian]]s (e.g. ''[[Pristichampsus]]''), large snakes (e.g. ''[[Titanoboa]]'') or [[varanid lizard]]s, or by flightless birds<ref name = "F.A.Smith"/> (e.g. ''[[Paleopsilopterus]]'' in South America). This is also the period when megafaunal flightless herbivorous [[gastornithid]] birds evolved in the Northern Hemisphere, while flightless [[paleognath]]s evolved to large size on [[Gondwana]]n land masses and [[Europe]]. Gastornithids and at least one lineage of flightless paleognath birds originated in Europe, both lineages dominating niches for large herbivores while mammals remained below {{Convert|45|kg|lb}} (in contrast with other landmasses like [[North America]] and [[Asia]], which saw the earlier evolution of larger mammals) and were the largest European tetrapods in the [[Paleocene]].<ref name="Buffetaut2014">{{cite journal|last1=Buffetaut|first1=E.|last2=Angst|first2=D.|title=Stratigraphic distribution of large flightless birds in the Palaeogene of Europe and its palaeobiological and palaeogeographical implications|journal=Earth-Science Reviews|volume=138|date=November 2014|pages=394–408|doi=10.1016/j.earscirev.2014.07.001|bibcode=2014ESRv..138..394B}}</ref>


Flightless paleognaths, termed [[ratite]]s, have traditionally been viewed as representing a lineage separate from that of their small flighted relatives, the [[Neotropic]] [[tinamou]]s. However, recent genetic studies have found that tinamous nest well within the ratite tree, and are the [[sister group]] of the extinct [[moa]] of New Zealand.<ref name = "Mitchell2014" /><ref name = "Phillips2010">{{cite journal |vauthors=Phillips MJ, Gibb GC, Crimp EA, Penny D |title=Tinamous and moa flock together: mitochondrial genome sequence analysis reveals independent losses of flight among ratites |journal=Systematic Biology |volume=59 |issue=1 |pages=90–107 |date=January 2010 |pmid=20525622 |doi=10.1093/sysbio/syp079|doi-access=free }}</ref><ref name = "Baker2014">{{Cite journal | doi = 10.1093/molbev/msu153| title = Genomic Support for a Moa-Tinamou Clade and Adaptive Morphological Convergence in Flightless Ratites| journal = Molecular Biology and Evolution| year = 2014| last1 = Baker | first1 = A. J.| last2 = Haddrath | first2 = O.| last3 = McPherson | first3 = J. D.| last4 = Cloutier | first4 = A.| volume=31 | issue = 7| pages=1686–1696 | pmid=24825849| doi-access = free}}</ref> Similarly, the small [[Kiwi (bird)|kiwi]] of New Zealand have been found to be the sister group of the extinct [[elephant bird]]s of Madagascar.<ref name = "Mitchell2014" /> These findings indicate that [[Flightless bird|flightlessness]] and gigantism arose independently multiple times among ratites via [[parallel evolution]].
Flightless paleognaths, termed [[ratite]]s, have traditionally been viewed as representing a lineage separate from that of their small flighted relatives, the [[Neotropic]] [[tinamou]]s. However, recent genetic studies have found that tinamous nest well within the ratite tree, and are the [[sister group]] of the extinct [[moa]] of New Zealand.<ref name = "Mitchell2014" /><ref name = "Phillips2010">{{cite journal |vauthors=Phillips MJ, Gibb GC, Crimp EA, Penny D |title=Tinamous and moa flock together: mitochondrial genome sequence analysis reveals independent losses of flight among ratites |journal=Systematic Biology |volume=59 |issue=1 |pages=90–107 |date=January 2010 |pmid=20525622 |doi=10.1093/sysbio/syp079|doi-access=free }}</ref><ref name = "Baker2014">{{Cite journal | doi = 10.1093/molbev/msu153| title = Genomic Support for a Moa-Tinamou Clade and Adaptive Morphological Convergence in Flightless Ratites| journal = Molecular Biology and Evolution| year = 2014| last1 = Baker | first1 = A. J.| last2 = Haddrath | first2 = O.| last3 = McPherson | first3 = J. D.| last4 = Cloutier | first4 = A.| volume=31 | issue = 7| pages=1686–1696 | pmid=24825849| doi-access = free}}</ref> Similarly, the small [[Kiwi (bird)|kiwi]] of New Zealand have been found to be the sister group of the extinct [[elephant bird]]s of Madagascar.<ref name = "Mitchell2014" /> These findings indicate that [[Flightless bird|flightlessness]] and gigantism arose independently multiple times among ratites via [[parallel evolution]].<ref name="Murray 2004" />


Predatory megafaunal flightless birds were often able to compete with mammals in the early [[Cenozoic]]. Later in the Cenozoic, however, they were displaced by advanced carnivorans and died out. In North America, the [[bathornithids]] ''[[Paracrax]]'' and ''[[Bathornis]]'' were apex predators but became extinct by the [[Early Miocene]]. In South America, the related [[phorusrhacid]]s shared the dominant predatory niches with metatherian [[Sparassodonta|sparassodont]]s during most of the Cenozoic but declined and ultimately went extinct after eutherian predators arrived from North America (as part of the [[Great American Interchange]]) during the [[Pliocene]]. In contrast, large herbivorous flightless ratites have survived to the present.
Predatory megafaunal flightless birds were often able to compete with mammals in the early [[Cenozoic]]. Later in the Cenozoic, however, they were displaced by advanced carnivorans and died out. In North America, the [[bathornithids]] ''[[Paracrax]]'' and ''[[Bathornis]]'' were apex predators but became extinct by the [[Early Miocene]]. In South America, the related [[phorusrhacid]]s shared the dominant predatory niches with metatherian [[Sparassodonta|sparassodont]]s during most of the Cenozoic but declined and ultimately went extinct after eutherian predators arrived from North America (as part of the [[Great American Interchange]]) during the [[Pliocene]]. In contrast, large herbivorous flightless ratites have survived to the present.<ref name="Murray 2004" />


However, none of the flightless birds of the Cenozoic, including the predatory ''[[Brontornis]]'', possibly omnivorous ''[[Dromornis stirtoni]]''<ref name = "Murray 2004">{{cite book
However, none of the flightless birds of the Cenozoic, including the predatory ''[[Brontornis]]'', possibly omnivorous ''[[Dromornis stirtoni]]''<ref name = "Murray 2004">{{cite book
Line 84: Line 76:
| publisher = Indiana University Press | pages = 51, 314
| publisher = Indiana University Press | pages = 51, 314
| isbn = 978-0-253-34282-9 | access-date=7 January 2012
| isbn = 978-0-253-34282-9 | access-date=7 January 2012
}}</ref> or herbivorous ''[[Vorombe]]'', ever grew to masses much above 500&nbsp;kg, and thus never attained the size of the largest mammalian carnivores, let alone that of the largest mammalian herbivores. It has been suggested that the increasing thickness of avian eggshells in proportion to egg mass with increasing egg size places an upper limit on the size of birds.<ref name = "Murray 2004b">{{cite book
}}</ref> or herbivorous ''[[Aepyornis]]'', ever grew to masses much above {{Convert|500|kg|lb}}, and thus never attained the size of the largest mammalian carnivores, let alone that of the largest mammalian herbivores. It has been suggested that the increasing thickness of avian eggshells in proportion to egg mass with increasing egg size places an upper limit on the size of birds.<ref name = "Murray 2004b">{{cite book
| last1 = Ibid | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-t6cQHdVEggC&pg=PA212
| last1 = Ibid | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-t6cQHdVEggC&pg=PA212
| title = p. 212| isbn=978-0253342829
| title = p. 212| isbn=978-0-253-34282-9
| year=2004
| year=2004
}}</ref>{{refn | Nonavian dinosaur size was not similarly constrained because they had a different relationship between body mass and egg size than birds. The 400 kg ''[[Aepyornis]]'' had larger eggs than nearly all dinosaurs.<ref name="Carpenter1999">{{cite book|author=Kenneth Carpenter|title=Eggs, Nests, and Baby Dinosaurs: A Look at Dinosaur Reproduction|url=https://archive.org/details/isbn_9780253334978|url-access=registration|page=[https://archive.org/details/isbn_9780253334978/page/100 100]|access-date=6 May 2013|year=1999|publisher=[[Indiana University Press]]|isbn=978-0-253-33497-8|oclc= 42009424}}</ref><ref name="JacksonVarricchio2008">{{cite journal|last1=Jackson|first1=F. D.|last2= Varricchio|first2=D. J.|last3=Jackson|first3=R. A.|last4=Vila|first4= B.|last5=Chiappe |first5=L. M.|title=Comparison of water vapor conductance in a titanosaur egg from the Upper Cretaceous of Argentina and a ''Megaloolithus siruguei'' egg from Spain|journal=Paleobiology|volume= 34|issue=2|year=2008|pages= 229–246|issn=0094-8373|doi= 10.1666/0094-8373(2008)034[0229:COWVCI]2.0.CO;2}}</ref>| group = note}} The largest species of ''Dromornis'', ''D. stirtoni'', may have gone extinct after it attained the maximum avian body mass and was then outcompeted by marsupial [[diprotodon]]ts that evolved to sizes several times larger.<ref name = "Murray 2004c">{{cite book
| publisher=Indiana University Press }}</ref>{{refn | Nonavian dinosaur size was not similarly constrained because they had a different relationship between body mass and egg size than birds. The {{Convert|400|kg|lb}} ''[[Aepyornis]]'' had larger eggs than nearly all dinosaurs.<ref name="Carpenter1999">{{cite book|author=Kenneth Carpenter|title=Eggs, Nests, and Baby Dinosaurs: A Look at Dinosaur Reproduction|url=https://archive.org/details/isbn_9780253334978|url-access=registration|page=[https://archive.org/details/isbn_9780253334978/page/100 100]|access-date=6 May 2013|year=1999|publisher=[[Indiana University Press]]|isbn=978-0-253-33497-8|oclc= 42009424}}</ref><ref name="JacksonVarricchio2008">{{cite journal|last1=Jackson|first1=F. D.|last2= Varricchio|first2=D. J.|last3=Jackson|first3=R. A.|last4=Vila|first4= B.|last5=Chiappe |first5=L. M.|title=Comparison of water vapor conductance in a titanosaur egg from the Upper Cretaceous of Argentina and a ''Megaloolithus siruguei'' egg from Spain|journal=Paleobiology|volume= 34|issue=2|year=2008|pages= 229–246|issn=0094-8373|doi= 10.1666/0094-8373(2008)034[0229:COWVCI]2.0.CO;2|s2cid=85880201 }}</ref>| group = note}} The largest species of ''Dromornis'', ''D. stirtoni'', may have gone extinct after it attained the maximum avian body mass and was then outcompeted by marsupial [[diprotodon]]ts that evolved to sizes several times larger.<ref name = "Murray 2004c">{{cite book
| last1 = Ibid | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-t6cQHdVEggC&pg=PA277
| last1 = Ibid | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-t6cQHdVEggC&pg=PA277
| title = p. 277| isbn=978-0253342829
| title = p. 277| isbn=978-0-253-34282-9
| year=2004
| year=2004
}}</ref>
| publisher=Indiana University Press }}</ref>


===In giant turtles===
===In giant turtles===
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|url=http://www.advancedconservation.org/library/hansen_etal_2010.pdf
|url=http://www.advancedconservation.org/library/hansen_etal_2010.pdf
|doi=10.1111/j.1600-0587.2010.06305.x
|doi=10.1111/j.1600-0587.2010.06305.x
|bibcode=2010Ecogr..33..272H
|access-date=2011-02-26
|access-date=2011-02-26
|url-status=dead
|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110724224354/http://www.advancedconservation.org/library/hansen_etal_2010.pdf
|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110724224354/http://www.advancedconservation.org/library/hansen_etal_2010.pdf
|archive-date=July 24, 2011
|archive-date=July 24, 2011
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|doi= 10.22179/REVMACN.5.26
|doi= 10.22179/REVMACN.5.26
|doi-access=free
|doi-access=free
}}</ref> The largest known terrestrial tortoise was ''[[Megalochelys atlas]]'', an animal that probably weighed about {{cvt|1,000|kg}}.<ref>{{Citation |last1=Gordon |first1=Iain J. |title=The Ecology of Browsing and Grazing in Other Vertebrate Taxa |date=2019 |work=The Ecology of Browsing and Grazing II |pages=339–404 |editor-last=Gordon |editor-first=Iain J. |url=|place=Cham |publisher=Springer International Publishing |language=en |doi=10.1007/978-3-030-25865-8_15 |isbn=978-3-030-25865-8 |last2=Prins |first2=Herbert H. T. |last3=Mallon |first3=Jordan |last4=Puk |first4=Laura D. |last5=Miranda |first5=Everton B. P. |last6=Starling-Manne |first6=Carolina |last7=van der Wal |first7=René |last8=Moore |first8=Ben |last9=Foley |first9=William |editor2-last=Prins |editor2-first=Herbert H. T.}}</ref>
}}</ref> The largest known terrestrial tortoise was ''[[Megalochelys atlas]]'', an animal that probably weighed about 1,000&nbsp;kg.


Some earlier aquatic Testudines, e.g. the marine ''[[Archelon]]'' of the Cretaceous<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Jaffe |first1=Alexander L. |last2=Slater |first2=Graham J. |last3=Alfaro |first3=Michael E. |date=2011-08-23 |title=The evolution of island gigantism and body size variation in tortoises and turtles |journal=Biology Letters |language=en |volume=7 |issue=4 |pages=558–561 |doi=10.1098/rsbl.2010.1084 |issn=1744-9561 |pmc=3130210 |pmid=21270022}}</ref> and freshwater ''[[Stupendemys]]'' of the Miocene, were considerably larger, weighing more than {{cvt|2,000|kg}}.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Cadena |first1=Edwin-Alberto |last2=Link |first2=Andrés |last3=Cooke |first3=Siobhán B. |last4=Stroik |first4=Laura K. |last5=Vanegas |first5=Andrés F. |last6=Tallman |first6=Melissa |date=December 2021 |title=New insights on the anatomy and ontogeny of the largest extinct freshwater turtles |url=|journal=Heliyon |volume=7 |issue=12 |pages=e08591 |doi=10.1016/j.heliyon.2021.e08591 |doi-access=free |pmid=35005268 |pmc=8717240 |bibcode=2021Heliy...708591C |issn=2405-8440}}</ref>
Some earlier aquatic Testudines, e.g. the marine ''[[Archelon]]'' of the Cretaceous and freshwater ''[[Stupendemys]]'' of the Miocene, were considerably larger, weighing more than 2,000&nbsp; kg.


==Megafaunal mass extinctions==
==Megafaunal mass extinctions==


===Timing and possible causes===
===Timing and possible causes===
{{Main|Late Pleistocene extinctions}}
[[File:Large Mammals Africa Australia NAmerica Madagascar.svg|thumb|upright=1.25|Correlations between times of first appearance of humans and unique megafaunal extinction pulses on different land masses]]
[[File:Large Mammals Africa Australia NAmerica Madagascar.svg|thumb|upright=1.25|Correlations between times of first appearance of humans and unique megafaunal extinction pulses on different land masses]]
[[File:Ice Age Temperature.png|thumb|upright=1.25|Cyclical pattern of global [[Climate change (general concept)|climate change]] over the last 450,000 years (based on Antarctic temperatures and global ice volume), showing that there were no unique climatic events that would account for any of the megafaunal extinction pulses]]
[[File:Ice Age Temperature.png|thumb|upright=1.25|Cyclical pattern of global [[Climate change (general concept)|climate change]] over the last 450,000 years (based on Antarctic temperatures and global ice volume), showing that there were no unique climatic events that would account for any of the megafaunal extinction pulses]]


[[Late Pleistocene extinctions|Numerous extinctions]] occurred during the latter half of the [[Last Glacial Period]] when most large mammals went extinct in the [[Americas]], [[Australia-New Guinea]], and [[Eurasia]], including over 80% of all terrestrial animals with a body mass greater than {{Convert|1,000|kg|lb}}. Small animals and other organisms like plants were generally unaffected by the extinctions, which is unprecented in previous extinctions during the last 30 million years.<ref name=":2">{{Cite journal |last1=Svenning |first1=Jens-Christian |last2=Lemoine |first2=Rhys T. |last3=Bergman |first3=Juraj |last4=Buitenwerf |first4=Robert |last5=Le Roux |first5=Elizabeth |last6=Lundgren |first6=Erick |last7=Mungi |first7=Ninad |last8=Pedersen |first8=Rasmus Ø. |date=2024 |title=The late-Quaternary megafauna extinctions: Patterns, causes, ecological consequences and implications for ecosystem management in the Anthropocene |journal=Cambridge Prisms: Extinction |language=en |volume=2 |doi=10.1017/ext.2024.4 |issn=2755-0958 |doi-access=free}}</ref>
The [[Holocene extinction]] (see also [[Quaternary extinction event]]), occurred at the end of the [[Last glacial period|last ice age glacial period]] (a.k.a. the [[Würm glaciation]]) when many giant ice age mammals, such as [[woolly mammoth]]s, went extinct in the [[Americas]] and northern [[Eurasia]]. An analysis of the extinction event in North America found it to be unique among Cenozoic extinction pulses in its selectivity for large animals.<ref name="Alroy1999">{{Citation
| last1= Alroy | first1= J. | author-link = John Alroy
| editor-last = MacPhee | editor-first = R. D. E.
| place = New York | publisher = Plenum | volume = 2 | year = 1999
| series = Advances in Vertebrate Paleobiology
| title = Extinctions in Near Time: Causes, Contexts, and Consequences
| chapter = Putting North America's End-Pleistocene Megafaunal Extinction in Context: Large-Scale Analyses of Spatial Patterns, Extinction Rates, and Size Distributions
| pages = 105–143 | chapter-url = https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-1-4757-5202-1
| doi = 10.1007/978-1-4757-5202-1_6 | isbn = 978-1-4757-5202-1 | oclc = 41368299}}</ref>{{rp|at=Fig. 10}} Various theories have attributed the wave of extinctions to [[Quaternary extinction event#Hunting hypothesis|human hunting]], [[Quaternary extinction event#Climate change hypothesis|climate change]], [[Quaternary extinction event#Hyperdisease hypothesis|disease]], a [[Younger Dryas impact event|putative extraterrestrial impact]], or other causes. However, this extinction near the end of the [[Pleistocene]] was just one of a series of megafaunal extinction pulses that have occurred during the last 50,000 years over much of the Earth's surface, with [[Africa]] and southern [[Asia]] (where the local megafauna had a chance to evolve alongside modern humans) being comparatively less affected. The latter areas did suffer a gradual attrition of megafauna, particularly of the slower-moving species (a class of vulnerable megafauna epitomized by [[giant tortoise]]s), over the last several million years.<ref name=corlett>{{Cite journal | last1 = Corlett | first1 = R. T. | year = 2006 | title = Megafaunal extinctions in tropical Asia | url = http://www.tropicalbio.org/pastissues/tn_v17_n3_Sept_2006.pdf | journal = Tropinet | volume = 17 | issue = 3 | pages = 1–3 | access-date = 2010-10-04}}</ref><ref name="Edmeades">{{Cite web | last = Edmeades | first = Baz | title = Megafauna — First Victims of the Human-Caused Extinction | website= megafauna.com |publisher = (internet-published book with Foreword by [[Paul S. Martin]]) | url = http://www.megafauna.com/ | access-date = 2020-02-13 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20141225044106/http://megafauna.com/table-of-contents/ | archive-date = 2014-12-25 | url-status = dead }}</ref>


Various theories have attributed the wave of extinctions to [[Quaternary extinction event#Hunting hypothesis|human hunting]], [[Quaternary extinction event#Climate change hypothesis|climate change]], [[Quaternary extinction event#Hyperdisease hypothesis|disease]], [[Younger Dryas impact event|extraterrestrial impact]], [[Competition (biology)|competition from other animals]] or other causes. However, this extinction near the end of the [[Pleistocene]] was just one of a series of megafaunal extinction pulses that have occurred during the last 50,000 years over much of the Earth's surface, with [[Africa]] and [[Asia]] (where the local megafauna had a chance to evolve alongside modern humans) being comparatively less affected. The latter areas did suffer gradual attrition of megafauna, particularly of the slower-moving species (a class of vulnerable megafauna epitomized by [[giant tortoise]]s), over the last several million years.<ref name="corlett">{{Cite journal | last1 = Corlett | first1 = R. T. | year = 2006 | title = Megafaunal extinctions in tropical Asia | url = http://www.tropicalbio.org/pastissues/tn_v17_n3_Sept_2006.pdf | journal = Tropinet | volume = 17 | issue = 3 | pages = 1–3 | access-date = 2010-10-04 | archive-date = 2016-03-04 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160304074435/http://www.tropicalbio.org/pastissues/tn_v17_n3_Sept_2006.pdf | url-status = live }}</ref><ref name="Edmeades">{{Cite web | last = Edmeades | first = Baz | title = Megafauna — First Victims of the Human-Caused Extinction | website= megafauna.com |publisher = (internet-published book with Foreword by [[Paul Schultz Martin|Paul S. Martin]]) | url = http://www.megafauna.com/ | access-date = 2020-02-13 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20141225044106/http://megafauna.com/table-of-contents/ | archive-date = 2014-12-25 }}</ref>
Outside the mainland of [[Afro-Eurasia]], these megafaunal extinctions followed a highly distinctive landmass-by-landmass pattern that closely parallels the spread of humans into previously uninhabited regions of the world, and which shows no overall correlation with climatic history (which can be visualized with plots over recent geological time periods of climate markers such as [[:Image:Five Myr Climate Change.png|marine oxygen isotopes]] or [[:Image:Atmospheric CO2 with glaciers cycles.gif|atmospheric carbon dioxide levels]]).<ref name="Martin">{{cite book

| last = Martin | first = P. S. | author-link = Paul S. Martin
Outside the mainland of [[Afro-Eurasia]], these megafaunal extinctions followed a highly distinctive landmass-by-landmass pattern that closely parallels the spread of humans into previously uninhabited regions of the world, and which shows no overall correlation with climatic history (which can be visualized with plots over recent geological time periods of climate markers such as [[:Image:Five Myr Climate Change.png|marine oxygen isotopes]] or [[:Image:Atmospheric CO2 with glaciers cycles.gif|atmospheric carbon dioxide levels]]).<ref name="Martin">{{cite book | last = Martin | first = P. S. | author-link = Paul Schultz Martin | title = Twilight of the Mammoths: Ice Age Extinctions and the Rewilding of America | publisher = [[University of California Press]] | year = 2005 | chapter = Chapter 6. Deadly Syncopation | pages = 118–128 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=gfpla1OY268C | chapter-url = https://books.google.com/books?id=gfpla1OY268C&pg=PA118 | isbn = 978-0-520-23141-2 | oclc = 58055404 | access-date = 2014-11-11 | archive-date = 2024-03-27 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20240327192513/https://books.google.com/books?id=gfpla1OY268C | url-status = live }}</ref><ref name="Burney">{{Cite journal
| title = Twilight of the Mammoths: Ice Age Extinctions and the Rewilding of America
| publisher = [[University of California Press]] | year = 2005
| chapter = Chapter 6. Deadly Syncopation | pages = 118–128
| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=gfpla1OY268C
| chapter-url = https://books.google.com/books?id=gfpla1OY268C&pg=PA118
| isbn = 978-0-520-23141-2 |oclc= 58055404 | access-date= 2014-11-11}}</ref><ref name="Burney">{{Cite journal
| last1 = Burney | first1 = D. A.
| last1 = Burney | first1 = D. A.
| last2=Flannery | first2 = T. F. | author-link2 = Tim Flannery
| last2=Flannery | first2 = T. F. | author-link2 = Tim Flannery
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| journal = Trends in Ecology & Evolution | volume = 20 | issue = 7 | pages = 395–401 | date = July 2005
| journal = Trends in Ecology & Evolution | volume = 20 | issue = 7 | pages = 395–401 | date = July 2005
| url = http://web.njit.edu/~krussell/Required.pdf
| url = http://web.njit.edu/~krussell/Required.pdf
| doi = 10.1016/j.tree.2005.04.022 | pmid = 16701402 | access-date = 2014-11-11 |url-status=dead
| doi = 10.1016/j.tree.2005.04.022 | pmid = 16701402 | access-date = 2014-11-11
| archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20100610061434/http://www.anthropology.hawaii.edu/Fieldschools/Kauai/Publications/Publication%204.pdf
| archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20100610061434/http://www.anthropology.hawaii.edu/Fieldschools/Kauai/Publications/Publication%204.pdf
| archive-date= 2010-06-10 }}</ref> [[Australia]]<ref name="New Ages">{{Cite journal | last1 = Roberts | first1 = R. G. | last2 = Flannery | first2 = T. F. | author2-link = Tim Flannery | last3 = Ayliffe | first3 = L. K. | last4 = Yoshida | first4 = H. | last5 = Olley | first5 = J. M. | last6 = Prideaux | first6 = G. J. | last7 = Laslett | first7 = G. M. | last8 = Baynes | first8 = A. | last9 = Smith | first9 = M. A. | last10 = Jones | first10 = R. | last11 = Smith | first11 = B. L. | title = New Ages for the Last Australian Megafauna: Continent-Wide Extinction About 46,000 Years Ago | journal = [[Science (journal)|Science]] | volume = 292 | issue = 5523 | pages = 1888–1892 | date = 2001-06-08 | url = http://www.uow.edu.au/content/groups/public/@web/@sci/@eesc/documents/doc/uow014698.pdf | doi = 10.1126/science.1060264 | access-date = 2011-08-26 | pmid = 11397939 | bibcode = 2001Sci...292.1888R | s2cid = 45643228 | archive-date = 2019-02-10 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20190210051502/https://www.uow.edu.au/content/groups/public/@web/@sci/@eesc/documents/doc/uow014698.pdf | url-status = live }}</ref> and nearby islands (e.g., [[Flores]]<ref name="Callaway2016">{{cite journal
| archive-date= 2010-06-10 }}</ref> [[Australia]]<ref name="New Ages">{{Cite journal
| last1 = Roberts | first1 = R. G. | last2 = Flannery | first2 = T. F. | author2-link = Tim Flannery | last3 = Ayliffe | first3 = L. K. | last4 = Yoshida | first4 = H. | last5 = Olley | first5 = J. M. | last6 = Prideaux | first6 = G. J. | last7 = Laslett | first7 = G. M. | last8 = Baynes | first8 = A. | last9 = Smith | first9 = M. A. | last10 = Jones | first10 = R. | last11 = Smith | first11 = B. L. | title = New Ages for the Last Australian Megafauna: Continent-Wide Extinction About 46,000 Years Ago | journal = [[Science (journal)|Science]] | volume = 292 | issue = 5523 | pages = 1888–1892 | date = 2001-06-08 | url = http://www.uow.edu.au/content/groups/public/@web/@sci/@eesc/documents/doc/uow014698.pdf | doi = 10.1126/science.1060264 | access-date = 2011-08-26 | pmid=11397939|bibcode = 2001Sci...292.1888R| s2cid = 45643228 }}</ref> and nearby islands (e.g., [[Flores]]<ref name="Callaway2016">{{cite journal
|last1= Callaway|first1= E.|title=Human remains found in hobbit cave|journal= Nature|date= 2016-09-21|doi= 10.1038/nature.2016.20656|s2cid= 89272546}}</ref>) were struck first around 46,000 years ago, followed by [[Tasmania]] about 41,000 years ago (after formation of a land bridge to Australia about 43,000 years ago).<ref name="Diamond">{{Cite journal
|last1= Callaway|first1= E.|title=Human remains found in hobbit cave|journal= Nature|date= 2016-09-21|doi= 10.1038/nature.2016.20656|s2cid= 89272546}}</ref>) were struck first around 46,000 years ago, followed by [[Tasmania]] about 41,000 years ago (after formation of a land bridge to Australia about 43,000 years ago).<ref name="Diamond">{{Cite journal
| last = Diamond | first = Jared | author-link = Jared Diamond | title = Palaeontology: The last giant kangaroo
| last = Diamond | first = Jared | author-link = Jared Diamond | title = Palaeontology: The last giant kangaroo
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|url=http://www.control.com.au/bi2008/299megafauna.pdf
|url=http://www.control.com.au/bi2008/299megafauna.pdf
|access-date=2011-08-26
|access-date=2011-08-26
|url-status=dead
|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110927111457/http://www.control.com.au/bi2008/299megafauna.pdf
|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110927111457/http://www.control.com.au/bi2008/299megafauna.pdf
|archive-date=2011-09-27
|archive-date=2011-09-27
}}</ref> The role of humans in the extinction of Australia and New Guinea's megafauna has been disputed, with multiple studies showing a decline in the number of species prior to the peopling of the continent and the absence of any evidence of human predation.<ref name=":0">{{Cite journal|last1=Field|first1=Judith|last2=Wroe|first2=Stephen|last3=Trueman|first3=Clive N.|last4=Garvey|first4=Jillian|last5=Wyatt-Spratt|first5=Simon|date=2013-02-08|title=Looking for the archaeological signature in Australian Megafaunal extinctions|url=https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1040618211002266|journal=Quaternary International|series=Peopling the last new worlds: the first colonisation of Sahul and the Americas|language=en|volume=285|pages=76–88|doi=10.1016/j.quaint.2011.04.013|issn=1040-6182}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Dodson|first1=John|last2=Field|first2=Judith H.|date=2018|title=What does the occurrence of Sporormiella (Preussia) spores mean in Australian fossil sequences?|url=https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/jqs.3020|journal=Journal of Quaternary Science|language=en|volume=33|issue=4|pages=380–392|doi=10.1002/jqs.3020|s2cid=133737405|issn=1099-1417}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Wroe|first1=Stephen|last2=Field|first2=Judith H.|last3=Archer|first3=Michael|last4=Grayson|first4=Donald K.|last5=Price|first5=Gilbert J.|last6=Louys|first6=Julien|last7=Faith|first7=J. Tyler|last8=Webb|first8=Gregory E.|last9=Davidson|first9=Iain|last10=Mooney|first10=Scott D.|date=2013-09-03|title=Reply to Brook et al: No empirical evidence for human overkill of megafauna in Sahul|journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|language=en|volume=110|issue=36|pages=E3369|doi=10.1073/pnas.1310440110|issn=0027-8424|pmid=24137797|pmc=3767508|doi-access=free}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Dortch|first1=Joe|last2=Cupper|first2=Matt|last3=Grün|first3=Rainer|last4=Harpley|first4=Bernice|last5=Lee|first5=Kerrie|last6=Field|first6=Judith|date=2016-08-01|title=The timing and cause of megafauna mass deaths at Lancefield Swamp, south-eastern Australia|url=https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0277379116301949|journal=Quaternary Science Reviews|language=en|volume=145|pages=161–182|doi=10.1016/j.quascirev.2016.05.042|issn=0277-3791}}</ref> The impact of climate change has instead been cited for their decline.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Wroe|first1=Stephen|last2=Field|first2=Judith H.|last3=Archer|first3=Michael|last4=Grayson|first4=Donald K.|last5=Price|first5=Gilbert J.|last6=Louys|first6=Julien|last7=Faith|first7=J. Tyler|last8=Webb|first8=Gregory E.|last9=Davidson|first9=Iain|last10=Mooney|first10=Scott D.|date=2013-05-28|title=Climate change frames debate over the extinction of megafauna in Sahul (Pleistocene Australia-New Guinea)|journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|language=en|volume=110|issue=22|pages=8777–8781|doi=10.1073/pnas.1302698110|issn=0027-8424|pmid=23650401|pmc=3670326|doi-access=free}}</ref><ref name=":0" /> Stepwise [[Japan]] apparently about 30,000 years ago,<ref name="Norton">{{Cite journal
}}</ref> The role of humans in the extinction of Australia and New Guinea's megafauna has been disputed, with multiple studies showing a decline in the number of species prior to the arrival of humans on the continent and the absence of any evidence of human predation;<ref name=":0">{{Cite journal|last1=Field|first1=Judith|last2=Wroe|first2=Stephen|last3=Trueman|first3=Clive N.|last4=Garvey|first4=Jillian|last5=Wyatt-Spratt|first5=Simon|date=2013-02-08|title=Looking for the archaeological signature in Australian Megafaunal extinctions|url=http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1040618211002266|journal=Quaternary International|series=Peopling the last new worlds: the first colonisation of Sahul and the Americas|language=en|volume=285|pages=76–88|doi=10.1016/j.quaint.2011.04.013|bibcode=2013QuInt.285...76F|issn=1040-6182|archive-date=2012-12-18|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121218072629/http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1040618211002266|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Dodson|first1=John|last2=Field|first2=Judith H.|date=2018|title=What does the occurrence of Sporormiella (Preussia) spores mean in Australian fossil sequences?|url=https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/jqs.3020|journal=Journal of Quaternary Science|language=en|volume=33|issue=4|pages=380–392|doi=10.1002/jqs.3020|bibcode=2018JQS....33..380D|s2cid=133737405|issn=1099-1417|archive-date=2022-02-14|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220214002000/https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/jqs.3020|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Wroe|first1=Stephen|last2=Field|first2=Judith H.|last3=Archer|first3=Michael|last4=Grayson|first4=Donald K.|last5=Price|first5=Gilbert J.|last6=Louys|first6=Julien|last7=Faith|first7=J. Tyler|last8=Webb|first8=Gregory E.|last9=Davidson|first9=Iain|last10=Mooney|first10=Scott D.|date=2013-09-03|title=Reply to Brook et al: No empirical evidence for human overkill of megafauna in Sahul|journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|language=en|volume=110|issue=36|pages=E3369|doi=10.1073/pnas.1310440110|issn=0027-8424|pmid=24137797|pmc=3767508|bibcode=2013PNAS..110E3369W |doi-access=free}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Dortch|first1=Joe|last2=Cupper|first2=Matt|last3=Grün|first3=Rainer|last4=Harpley|first4=Bernice|last5=Lee|first5=Kerrie|last6=Field|first6=Judith|date=2016-08-01|title=The timing and cause of megafauna mass deaths at Lancefield Swamp, south-eastern Australia|url=https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0277379116301949|journal=Quaternary Science Reviews|language=en|volume=145|pages=161–182|doi=10.1016/j.quascirev.2016.05.042|bibcode=2016QSRv..145..161D|issn=0277-3791|archive-date=2024-03-27|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240327192636/https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0277379116301949|url-status=live}}</ref> the impact of climate change has instead been cited for their decline.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Wroe|first1=Stephen|last2=Field|first2=Judith H.|last3=Archer|first3=Michael|last4=Grayson|first4=Donald K.|last5=Price|first5=Gilbert J.|last6=Louys|first6=Julien|last7=Faith|first7=J. Tyler|last8=Webb|first8=Gregory E.|last9=Davidson|first9=Iain|last10=Mooney|first10=Scott D.|date=2013-05-28|title=Climate change frames debate over the extinction of megafauna in Sahul (Pleistocene Australia-New Guinea)|journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|language=en|volume=110|issue=22|pages=8777–8781|doi=10.1073/pnas.1302698110|issn=0027-8424|pmid=23650401|pmc=3670326|bibcode=2013PNAS..110.8777W |doi-access=free}}</ref><ref name=":0" /> Similarly, [[Japan]] lost most of its megafauna apparently about 30,000 years ago,<ref name="Norton">{{Cite journal
| last = Norton | first = C. J. |author2=Kondo, Y. |author3=Ono, A. |author4=Zhang, Y. |author5=Diab, M. C.
| last = Norton | first = C. J. |author2=Kondo, Y. |author3=Ono, A. |author4=Zhang, Y. |author5=Diab, M. C.
| title = The nature of megafaunal extinctions during the MIS 3–2 transition in Japan
| title = The nature of megafaunal extinctions during the MIS 3–2 transition in Japan
| journal = [[Quaternary International]] | volume = 211 | issue = 1–2 | pages = 113–122
| journal = [[Quaternary International]] | volume = 211 | issue = 1–2 | pages = 113–122
| date = 2009-05-23 | doi = 10.1016/j.quaint.2009.05.002
| date = 2009-05-23 | doi = 10.1016/j.quaint.2009.05.002
|bibcode = 2010QuInt.211..113N}}</ref> [[North America]] 13,000 years ago,{{refn | Analysis indicates that 35 genera of North American mammals went extinct more or less simultaneously in this event.<ref name="Faith2009">{{cite journal|last1=Faith|first1=J. T.|last2=Surovell|first2=T. A.|title=Synchronous extinction of North America's Pleistocene mammals|journal= Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|volume= 106|issue= 49|date= 2009-12-08|pages= 20641–20645|doi=10.1073/pnas.0908153106|pmid=19934040|pmc=2791611|bibcode=2009PNAS..10620641F|doi-access=free}}</ref>| group = note}} [[South America]] about 500 years later,<ref name="Haynes">{{Cite book
|bibcode = 2010QuInt.211..113N}}</ref> [[North America]] 13,000 years ago{{refn | Analysis indicates that 35 genera of North American mammals went extinct more or less simultaneously in this event.<ref name="Faith2009">{{cite journal|last1=Faith|first1=J. T.|last2=Surovell|first2=T. A.|title=Synchronous extinction of North America's Pleistocene mammals|journal= Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|volume= 106|issue= 49|date= 2009-12-08|pages= 20641–20645|doi=10.1073/pnas.0908153106|pmid=19934040|pmc=2791611|bibcode=2009PNAS..10620641F|doi-access=free}}</ref>| group = note}} and [[South America]] about 500 years later,<ref name="Haynes">{{Cite book | first = Gary | last = Haynes | editor-last = Haynes | editor-first = Gary | contribution = Introduction to the Volume | contribution-url = http://www.springerlink.com/content/w314m76738r91g35/?p=5af1eb7387d443a2b514b284c646efa7&pi=0 | title = American Megafaunal Extinctions at the End of the Pleistocene | year = 2009 | pages = 1–20 | publisher = [[Springer Science+Business Media|Springer]] | doi = 10.1007/978-1-4020-8793-6_1 | isbn = 978-1-4020-8792-9 | series = Vertebrate Paleobiology and Paleoanthropology }}{{Dead link|date=September 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref><ref name="Fiedel">{{Cite book
| first = Gary | last = Haynes | editor-last = Haynes | editor-first = Gary
| contribution = Introduction to the Volume
| contribution-url = http://www.springerlink.com/content/w314m76738r91g35/?p=5af1eb7387d443a2b514b284c646efa7&pi=0
| title = American Megafaunal Extinctions at the End of the Pleistocene | year = 2009 | pages = 1–20
| publisher = [[Springer Science+Business Media|Springer]]
| doi = 10.1007/978-1-4020-8793-6_1 | isbn = 978-1-4020-8792-9| series = Vertebrate Paleobiology and Paleoanthropology }}</ref><ref name="Fiedel">{{Cite book
| first = Stuart | last = Fiedel | editor-last = Haynes | editor-first = Gary
| first = Stuart | last = Fiedel | editor-last = Haynes | editor-first = Gary
| contribution = Sudden Deaths: The Chronology of Terminal Pleistocene Megafaunal Extinction
| contribution = Sudden Deaths: The Chronology of Terminal Pleistocene Megafaunal Extinction
| title = American Megafaunal Extinctions at the End of the Pleistocene | year = 2009 | pages = 21–37
| title = American Megafaunal Extinctions at the End of the Pleistocene | year = 2009 | pages = 21–37
| publisher = [[Springer Science+Business Media|Springer]]
| publisher = [[Springer Science+Business Media|Springer]]
| doi = 10.1007/978-1-4020-8793-6_2 | isbn = 978-1-4020-8792-9| series = Vertebrate Paleobiology and Paleoanthropology }}</ref> [[Prehistoric Cyprus|Cyprus]] 10,000 years ago,<ref name="Simmons1">{{Cite book
| doi = 10.1007/978-1-4020-8793-6_2 | isbn = 978-1-4020-8792-9| series = Vertebrate Paleobiology and Paleoanthropology }}</ref> [[Prehistoric Cyprus|Cyprus]] 10,000 years ago,<ref name="Simmons1">{{Cite book | last = Simmons | first = A. H. | title = Faunal extinction in an island society: pygmy hippopotamus hunters of Cyprus | publisher = [[Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers]] | series = Interdisciplinary Contributions to Archaeology | year = 1999 | page = 382 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=hCwYwyEBXEAC | doi = 10.1007/b109876 | isbn = 978-0-306-46088-3 | oclc = 41712246 | access-date = 2016-05-07 | archive-date = 2024-03-27 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20240327192513/https://books.google.com/books?id=hCwYwyEBXEAC | url-status = live }}</ref><ref name="Simmons2">{{Cite journal
| last = Simmons | first = A. H. | title = Faunal extinction in an island society: pygmy hippopotamus hunters of Cyprus | publisher = [[Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers]]
| series = Interdisciplinary Contributions to Archaeology
| year = 1999 | pages = 382 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=hCwYwyEBXEAC
| doi = 10.1007/b109876 | isbn = 978-0-306-46088-3
| oclc = 41712246}}</ref><ref name="Simmons2">{{Cite journal
| last = Simmons | first = A. H. |author2=Mandel, R. D.
| last = Simmons | first = A. H. |author2=Mandel, R. D.
| title = Not Such a New Light: A Response to Ammerman and Noller | journal = [[World Archaeology]]
| title = Not Such a New Light: A Response to Ammerman and Noller | journal = [[World Archaeology]]
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| doi = 10.1080/00438240701676169| s2cid = 161791746 }}</ref> the [[Antilles]] 6,000 years ago,<ref name="Steadman">{{cite journal
| doi = 10.1080/00438240701676169| s2cid = 161791746 }}</ref> the [[Antilles]] 6,000 years ago,<ref name="Steadman">{{cite journal
| last1 = Steadman | first1 = D. W. | author1-link = David Steadman
| last1 = Steadman | first1 = D. W. | author1-link = David Steadman
| last2 = Martin | first2 = P. S. | author2-link=Paul S. Martin
| last2 = Martin | first2 = P. S. | author2-link=Paul Schultz Martin
| last3 = MacPhee | first3 = R. D. E.
| last3 = MacPhee | first3 = R. D. E.
| last4 = Jull | first4 = A. J. T.
| last4 = Jull | first4 = A. J. T.
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| volume = 102 | issue = 33 | pages = 11763–11768
| volume = 102 | issue = 33 | pages = 11763–11768
| date = 2005-08-16 |doi = 10.1073/pnas.0502777102 |pmid = 16085711
| date = 2005-08-16 |doi = 10.1073/pnas.0502777102 |pmid = 16085711
| pmc = 1187974|bibcode = 2005PNAS..10211763S| doi-access = free }}</ref><ref name="Cooke2017">{{cite journal|last1= Cooke|first1=S. B.|last2= Dávalos|first2=L. M.|last3= Mychajliw|first3=A. M.|last4= Turvey|first4=S. T.|last5= Upham|first5=N. S.|title= Anthropogenic Extinction Dominates Holocene Declines of West Indian Mammals|journal= Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics|volume= 48|issue= 1|year= 2017|pages= 301–327|doi= 10.1146/annurev-ecolsys-110316-022754}}</ref> [[New Caledonia#Ecology|New Caledonia]]<ref name="Anderson">{{Cite journal
| pmc = 1187974|bibcode = 2005PNAS..10211763S| doi-access = free }}</ref><ref name="Cooke2017">{{cite journal|last1= Cooke|first1=S. B.|last2= Dávalos|first2=L. M.|last3= Mychajliw|first3=A. M.|last4= Turvey|first4=S. T.|last5= Upham|first5=N. S.|title= Anthropogenic Extinction Dominates Holocene Declines of West Indian Mammals|journal= Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics|volume= 48|issue= 1|year= 2017|pages= 301–327|doi= 10.1146/annurev-ecolsys-110316-022754|s2cid=90558542 }}</ref> [[New Caledonia#Ecology|New Caledonia]]<ref name="Anderson">{{Cite journal
| last = Anderson | first = A. |author2=Sand, C. |author3=Petchey, F. |author4=Worthy, T. H.
| last = Anderson | first = A. |author2=Sand, C. |author3=Petchey, F. |author4=Worthy, T. H.
| title = Faunal extinction and human habitation in New Caledonia: Initial results and implications of new research at the Pindai Caves
| title = Faunal extinction and human habitation in New Caledonia: Initial results and implications of new research at the Pindai Caves
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| journal = Annales de Paléontologie | volume = 91 | issue = 2 | pages = 167–180
| journal = Annales de Paléontologie | volume = 91 | issue = 2 | pages = 167–180
| date = April 2005 | doi = 10.1016/j.annpal.2004.12.002
| date = April 2005 | doi = 10.1016/j.annpal.2004.12.002
}}</ref> and the [[Commander Islands]] 250 years ago.<ref name="Hydrodamalis">{{cite journal
| bibcode = 2005AnPal..91..167J }}</ref> and the [[Commander Islands]] 250 years ago.<ref name="Hydrodamalis">{{cite journal
| last = Anderson | first = P. K. | title = Competition, Predation, and the Evolution and Extinction of Steller's Sea Cow, ''Hydrodamalis gigas''
| last = Anderson | first = P. K. | title = Competition, Predation, and the Evolution and Extinction of Steller's Sea Cow, ''Hydrodamalis gigas''
| journal = Marine Mammal Science | volume = 11 | issue = 3 | pages = 391–394
| journal = Marine Mammal Science | volume = 11 | issue = 3 | pages = 391–394
| date = July 1995 | url = http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/119963340/abstract
| date = July 1995 | url = http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/119963340/abstract
| archive-url = https://archive.today/20110511193530/http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/119963340/abstract
| archive-url = https://archive.today/20110511193530/http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/119963340/abstract
| url-status = dead
| archive-date = 2011-05-11
| archive-date = 2011-05-11
| doi = 10.1111/j.1748-7692.1995.tb00294.x
| doi = 10.1111/j.1748-7692.1995.tb00294.x
| access-date = 2011-08-30}}</ref> Nearly all of the world's isolated islands could furnish similar examples of extinctions occurring shortly after the arrival of [[human]]s, though most of these islands, such as the [[Hawaiian Islands]], never had terrestrial megafauna, so their [[List of extinct animals of the Hawaiian Islands|extinct fauna]] were smaller.<ref name="Martin"/><ref name="Burney"/>
| bibcode = 1995MMamS..11..391A | access-date = 2011-08-30}}</ref> Nearly all of the world's isolated islands could furnish similar examples of extinctions occurring shortly after the arrival of [[human]]s, though most of these islands, such as the [[Hawaiian Islands]], never had terrestrial megafauna, so their [[List of extinct animals of the Hawaiian Islands|extinct fauna]] were smaller, but still displayed [[island gigantism]].<ref name="Martin"/><ref name="Burney"/>


An analysis of the timing of [[Holarctic]] megafaunal extinctions and extirpations over the last 56,000 years has revealed a tendency for such events to cluster within [[interstadial]]s, periods of abrupt warming, but only when humans were also present. Humans may have impeded processes of migration and recolonization that would otherwise have allowed the megafaunal species to adapt to the climate shift.<ref name="Cooper2015">{{cite journal|last1=Cooper|first1=A.|last2=Turney|first2=C.|last3=Hughen|first3=K. A.|last4=Brook|first4=B. W.|last5=McDonald|first5=H. G.|last6=Bradshaw|first6=C. J. A.|title=Abrupt warming events drove Late Pleistocene Holarctic megafaunal turnover|journal=Science|date=2015-07-23|doi=10.1126/science.aac4315|pmid=26250679|volume=349|issue=6248|pages=602–6|bibcode=2015Sci...349..602C|s2cid=31686497}}</ref> In at least some areas, interstadials were periods of expanding human populations.<ref name="Müller2011">{{cite journal|last1=Müller|first1=U. C.|last2=Pross|first2=J.|last3=Tzedakis|first3=P. C.|last4=Gamble|first4=C.|last5=Kotthoff|first5=U.|last6=Schmiedl|first6=G.|last7=Wulf|first7=S.|last8=Christanis|first8=K.|title=The role of climate in the spread of modern humans into Europe|journal=[[Quaternary Science Reviews]]|volume= 30|issue= 3–4|date= February 2011|pages= 273–279|doi= 10.1016/j.quascirev.2010.11.016|bibcode=2011QSRv...30..273M}}</ref>
An analysis of the timing of [[Holarctic]] megafaunal extinctions and extirpations over the last 56,000 years has revealed a tendency for such events to cluster within [[interstadial]]s, periods of abrupt warming, but only when humans were also present. Humans may have impeded processes of migration and recolonization that would otherwise have allowed the megafaunal species to adapt to the climate shift.<ref name="Cooper2015">{{cite journal|last1=Cooper|first1=A.|last2=Turney|first2=C.|last3=Hughen|first3=K. A.|last4=Brook|first4=B. W.|last5=McDonald|first5=H. G.|last6=Bradshaw|first6=C. J. A.|title=Abrupt warming events drove Late Pleistocene Holarctic megafaunal turnover|journal=Science|date=2015-07-23|doi=10.1126/science.aac4315|pmid=26250679|volume=349|issue=6248|pages=602–6|bibcode=2015Sci...349..602C|s2cid=31686497|doi-access=free}}</ref> In at least some areas, interstadials were periods of expanding human populations.<ref name="Müller2011">{{cite journal|last1=Müller|first1=U. C.|last2=Pross|first2=J.|last3=Tzedakis|first3=P. C.|last4=Gamble|first4=C.|last5=Kotthoff|first5=U.|last6=Schmiedl|first6=G.|last7=Wulf|first7=S.|last8=Christanis|first8=K.|title=The role of climate in the spread of modern humans into Europe|journal=[[Quaternary Science Reviews]]|volume= 30|issue= 3–4|date= February 2011|pages= 273–279|doi= 10.1016/j.quascirev.2010.11.016|bibcode=2011QSRv...30..273M}}</ref>


An analysis of ''[[Sporormiella]]'' fungal spores (which derive mainly from the dung of megaherbivores) in swamp sediment cores spanning the last 130,000 years from [[Lynch's Crater]] in [[Queensland]], Australia, showed that the megafauna of that region virtually disappeared about 41,000 years ago, at a time when [[Climate change (general concept)|climate change]]s were minimal; the change was accompanied by an increase in charcoal, and was followed by a transition from rainforest to fire-tolerant [[sclerophyll]] vegetation. The high-resolution chronology of the changes supports the hypothesis that human hunting alone eliminated the megafauna, and that the subsequent change in flora was most likely a consequence of the elimination of browsers and an increase in fire.<ref name="Biello">{{cite web
An analysis of ''[[Sporormiella]]'' fungal spores (which derive mainly from the dung of megaherbivores) in swamp sediment cores spanning the last 130,000 years from [[Lynch's Crater]] in [[Queensland]], Australia, showed that the megafauna of that region virtually disappeared about 41,000 years ago, at a time when [[Climate change (general concept)|climate change]]s were minimal; the change was accompanied by an increase in charcoal, and was followed by a transition from rainforest to fire-tolerant [[sclerophyll]] vegetation. The high-resolution chronology of the changes supports the hypothesis that human hunting alone eliminated the megafauna, and that the subsequent change in flora was most likely a consequence of the elimination of browsers and an increase in fire.<ref name="Biello">{{cite web
| last = Biello | first = D. | title = Big Kill, Not Big Chill, Finished Off Giant Kangaroos
| last = Biello
| first = D.
| title = Big Kill, Not Big Chill, Finished Off Giant Kangaroos
| work = Scientific American news
| work = Scientific American news
| date = 2012-03-22
| date = 2012-03-22
| url = http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=hunters-killed-off-big-animals-australia
| url = http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=hunters-killed-off-big-animals-australia
| access-date = 2012-03-25}}</ref><ref name="McGlone">{{cite journal
| access-date = 2012-03-25
| archive-date = 2012-03-23
| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20120323062901/http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=hunters-killed-off-big-animals-australia
| url-status = live
}}</ref><ref name="McGlone">{{cite journal
| last = McGlone | first = M. | title = The Hunters Did It
| last = McGlone | first = M. | title = The Hunters Did It
| journal = [[Science (journal)|Science]]
| journal = [[Science (journal)|Science]]
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| volume = 335 | issue = 6075 | pages = 1483–1486
| volume = 335 | issue = 6075 | pages = 1483–1486
| date = 2012-03-23 | doi = 10.1126/science.1214261
| date = 2012-03-23 | doi = 10.1126/science.1214261
|bibcode = 2012Sci...335.1483R | pmid=22442481| s2cid = 26675232 }}</ref><ref name="Johnson2016"/> The increase in fire lagged the disappearance of megafauna by about a century, and most likely resulted from accumulation of fuel once browsing stopped. Over the next several centuries grass increased; sclerophyll vegetation increased with a lag of another century, and a sclerophyll forest developed after about another thousand years.<ref name="Rule"/> During two periods of climate change about 120,000 and 75,000 years ago, sclerophyll vegetation had also increased at the site in response to a shift to cooler, drier conditions; neither of these episodes had a significant impact on megafaunal abundance.<ref name="Rule"/> Similar conclusions regarding the culpability of human hunters in the disappearance of Pleistocene megafauna were derived from high-resolution chronologies obtained via an analysis of a large collection of eggshell fragments of the flightless Australian bird ''[[Genyornis newtoni]]'',<ref name="Miller1999">{{Cite journal | doi = 10.1126/science.283.5399.205 |pmid = 9880249 |title = Pleistocene Extinction of ''Genyornis newtoni'': Human Impact on Australian Megafauna |journal = Science |volume = 283 |issue = 5399 |pages = 205–208 |date = 1999-01-08 |last1 = Miller | first1 = G. H. |last2 = Magee |first2 = J. W. |last3 = Johnson |first3 = B. J. |last4 = Fogel |first4 = M. L. |last5 = Spooner |first5 = N. A. |last6 = McCulloch |first6 = M. T. |last7 = Ayliffe |first7 = L. K.}}</ref><ref name="MillerMagee2016">{{cite journal|last1=Miller|first1=G.|last2= Magee|first2=J.|last3= Smith|first3=M.|last4= Spooner|first4=N.|last5= Baynes|first5=A.|last6= Lehman|first6=S.|last7=Fogel|first7=M.|last8= Johnston|first8=H.|last9= Williams|first9=D.|last10= Clark|first10=P.|last11= Florian|first11=C.|last12= Holst|first12=R.|last13= DeVogel|first13=S.|title=Human predation contributed to the extinction of the Australian megafaunal bird Genyornis newtoni ∼47 ka|journal=Nature Communications|volume= 7|date=2016-01-29|page= 10496|doi=10.1038/ncomms10496|pmid=26823193|pmc=4740177|bibcode=2016NatCo...710496M}}</ref><ref name="Johnson2016">{{cite journal | last1= Johnson|first1=C. N.|last2= Alroy|first2= J.|last3= Beeton|first3=N. J.|last4= Bird|first4=M. I.|last5= Brook|first5=B. W.|last6= Cooper|first6= A.|last7= Gillespie|first7= R.|last8= Herrando-Pérez|first8= S.|last9= Jacobs|first9= Z.|last10= Miller|first10=G. H.|last11= Prideaux|first11=G. J.|last12= Roberts|first12=R. G.|last13= Rodríguez-Rey|first13= M.|last14= Saltré|first14= F.|last15= Turney|first15=C. S. M.|last16= Bradshaw|first16=C. J. A. | title= What caused extinction of the Pleistocene megafauna of Sahul? | journal= Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences | volume= 283 | issue= 1824 | pages= 20152399 | date= 10 February 2016 | doi= 10.1098/rspb.2015.2399|pmid=26865301|pmc=4760161}}</ref> from analysis of ''Sporormiella'' fungal spores from a lake in eastern North America<ref name="Johnson2009">{{Cite journal | doi = 10.1126/science.1182770 |pmid = 19965418 |title = Megafaunal Decline and Fall |journal = Science |volume = 326 |issue = 5956 |pages = 1072–1073 |date = 2009-11-20 |last1 = Johnson | first1 = C.|bibcode = 2009Sci...326.1072J |s2cid = 206523763 }}</ref><ref name="Gill2009">{{Cite journal | doi = 10.1126/science.1179504 |pmid = 19965426 |title = Pleistocene Megafaunal Collapse, Novel Plant Communities, and Enhanced Fire Regimes in North America |journal = Science |volume = 326 |issue = 5956 |pages = 1100–1103 | date = 2009-11-20 |last1 = Gill | first1 = J. L. |last2 = Williams | first2 = J. W. |last3 = Jackson | first3 = S. T. |last4 = Lininger | first4 = K. B. |last5 = Robinson | first5 = G. S.|bibcode = 2009Sci...326.1100G |s2cid = 206522597 |url = http://doc.rero.ch/record/210391/files/PAL_E4398.pdf }}</ref> and from study of deposits of [[Shasta ground sloth]] dung left in over half a dozen caves in the American southwest.<ref name = "Fiedal2009">{{Cite book | first = Stuart | last = Fiedal | editor-last = Haynes | editor-first = Gary | contribution = Sudden Deaths: The Chronology of Terminal Pleistocene Megafaunal Extinction | title = American Megafaunal Extinctions at the End of the Pleistocene | year = 2009 | pages = 21–37 | publisher = [[Springer Science+Business Media|Springer]] | doi = 10.1007/978-1-4020-8793-6_2 | isbn = 978-1-4020-8792-9 | series = Vertebrate Paleobiology and Paleoanthropology }}</ref><ref name="Martin2005b">{{cite book
|bibcode = 2012Sci...335.1483R | pmid=22442481| s2cid = 26675232 }}</ref><ref name="Johnson2016"/> The increase in fire lagged the disappearance of megafauna by about a century, and most likely resulted from accumulation of fuel once browsing stopped. Over the next several centuries grass increased; sclerophyll vegetation increased with a lag of another century, and a sclerophyll forest developed after about another thousand years.<ref name="Rule"/> During two periods of climate change about 120,000 and 75,000 years ago, sclerophyll vegetation had also increased at the site in response to a shift to cooler, drier conditions; neither of these episodes had a significant impact on megafaunal abundance.<ref name="Rule"/> Similar conclusions regarding the culpability of human hunters in the disappearance of Pleistocene megafauna were derived from high-resolution chronologies obtained via an analysis of a large collection of eggshell fragments of the flightless Australian bird ''[[Genyornis newtoni]]'',<ref name="Miller1999">{{Cite journal | doi = 10.1126/science.283.5399.205 |pmid = 9880249 |title = Pleistocene Extinction of ''Genyornis newtoni'': Human Impact on Australian Megafauna |journal = Science |volume = 283 |issue = 5399 |pages = 205–208 |date = 1999-01-08 |last1 = Miller | first1 = G. H. |last2 = Magee |first2 = J. W. |last3 = Johnson |first3 = B. J. |last4 = Fogel |first4 = M. L. |last5 = Spooner |first5 = N. A. |last6 = McCulloch |first6 = M. T. |last7 = Ayliffe |first7 = L. K.}}</ref><ref name="MillerMagee2016">{{cite journal|last1=Miller|first1=G.|last2= Magee|first2=J.|last3= Smith|first3=M.|last4= Spooner|first4=N.|last5= Baynes|first5=A.|last6= Lehman|first6=S.|last7=Fogel|first7=M.|last8= Johnston|first8=H.|last9= Williams|first9=D.|last10= Clark|first10=P.|last11= Florian|first11=C.|last12= Holst|first12=R.|last13= DeVogel|first13=S.|title=Human predation contributed to the extinction of the Australian megafaunal bird Genyornis newtoni ~47 ka|journal=Nature Communications|volume= 7|date=2016-01-29|page= 10496|doi=10.1038/ncomms10496|pmid=26823193|pmc=4740177|bibcode=2016NatCo...710496M}}</ref><ref name="Johnson2016">{{cite journal | last1= Johnson|first1=C. N.|last2= Alroy|first2= J.|last3= Beeton|first3=N. J.|last4= Bird|first4=M. I.|last5= Brook|first5=B. W.|last6= Cooper|first6= A.|last7= Gillespie|first7= R.|last8= Herrando-Pérez|first8= S.|last9= Jacobs|first9= Z.|last10= Miller|first10=G. H.|last11= Prideaux|first11=G. J.|last12= Roberts|first12=R. G.|last13= Rodríguez-Rey|first13= M.|last14= Saltré|first14= F.|last15= Turney|first15=C. S. M.|last16= Bradshaw|first16=C. J. A. | title= What caused extinction of the Pleistocene megafauna of Sahul? | journal= Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences | volume= 283 | issue= 1824 | page= 20152399 | date= 10 February 2016 | doi= 10.1098/rspb.2015.2399|pmid=26865301|pmc=4760161}}</ref> from analysis of ''Sporormiella'' fungal spores from a lake in eastern North America<ref name="Johnson2009">{{Cite journal | doi = 10.1126/science.1182770 |pmid = 19965418 |title = Megafaunal Decline and Fall |journal = Science |volume = 326 |issue = 5956 |pages = 1072–1073 |date = 2009-11-20 |last1 = Johnson | first1 = C.|bibcode = 2009Sci...326.1072J |s2cid = 206523763 }}</ref><ref name="Gill2009">{{Cite journal |doi = 10.1126/science.1179504 |pmid = 19965426 |title = Pleistocene Megafaunal Collapse, Novel Plant Communities, and Enhanced Fire Regimes in North America |journal = Science |volume = 326 |issue = 5956 |pages = 1100–1103 |date = 2009-11-20 |last1 = Gill |first1 = J. L. |last2 = Williams |first2 = J. W. |last3 = Jackson |first3 = S. T. |last4 = Lininger |first4 = K. B. |last5 = Robinson |first5 = G. S. |bibcode = 2009Sci...326.1100G |s2cid = 206522597 |url = http://doc.rero.ch/record/210391/files/PAL_E4398.pdf |access-date = 2018-11-09 |archive-date = 2017-09-22 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20170922021056/http://doc.rero.ch/record/210391/files/PAL_E4398.pdf |url-status = live }}</ref> and from study of deposits of [[Shasta ground sloth]] dung left in over half a dozen caves in the American Southwest.<ref name = "Fiedal2009">{{Cite book | first = Stuart | last = Fiedal | editor-last = Haynes | editor-first = Gary | contribution = Sudden Deaths: The Chronology of Terminal Pleistocene Megafaunal Extinction | title = American Megafaunal Extinctions at the End of the Pleistocene | year = 2009 | pages = 21–37 | publisher = [[Springer Science+Business Media|Springer]] | doi = 10.1007/978-1-4020-8793-6_2 | isbn = 978-1-4020-8792-9 | series = Vertebrate Paleobiology and Paleoanthropology }}</ref><ref name="Martin2005b">{{cite book | last = Martin | first = P. S. | author-link = Paul Schultz Martin | title = Twilight of the Mammoths: Ice Age Extinctions and the Rewilding of America | publisher = [[University of California Press]] | year = 2005 | chapter = Chapter 4. Ground Sloths at Home | pages = 78–99 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=gfpla1OY268C | chapter-url = https://books.google.com/books?id=gfpla1OY268C&pg=PA78 | isbn = 978-0-520-23141-2 | oclc = 58055404 | access-date = 2014-11-11 | archive-date = 2024-03-27 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20240327192513/https://books.google.com/books?id=gfpla1OY268C | url-status = live }}</ref>
| last = Martin | first = P. S. | author-link = Paul S. Martin
| title = Twilight of the Mammoths: Ice Age Extinctions and the Rewilding of America
| publisher = [[University of California Press]] | year = 2005
| chapter = Chapter 4. Ground Sloths at Home | pages = 78–99
| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=gfpla1OY268C
| chapter-url = https://books.google.com/books?id=gfpla1OY268C&pg=PA78
| isbn = 978-0-520-23141-2 |oclc= 58055404 | access-date= 2014-11-11}}</ref>


Continuing human hunting and environmental disturbance has led to additional [[Holocene extinction#Ongoing Holocene extinction|megafaunal extinctions in the recent past]], and has created a [[IUCN Red List critically endangered species|serious danger of further extinctions]] in the near future (see examples below). Direct killing by humans, primarily for meat, is the most significant factor in contemporary megafaunal decline.<ref>{{cite news |last= Milman|first=Oliver|date=February 6, 2019 |title=The killing of large species is pushing them towards extinction, study finds|url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/feb/06/the-killing-of-large-species-is-pushing-them-towards-extinction-study-finds|work=The Guardian |access-date=February 13, 2019}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|first=W. J.|last=Ripple|display-authors=etal.|year=2019|title=Are we eating the world's megafauna to extinction?|journal=Conservation Letters|volume=12|issue=3|page=e12627|doi=10.1111/conl.12627|doi-access=free}}</ref>
Continuing human hunting and environmental disturbance has led to additional [[Holocene extinction#Ongoing Holocene extinction|megafaunal extinctions in the recent past]], and has created a [[IUCN Red List critically endangered species|serious danger of further extinctions]] in the near future (see examples below). Direct killing by humans, primarily for meat or other body parts, is the most significant factor in contemporary megafaunal decline.<ref>{{cite news|last=Milman|first=Oliver|date=February 6, 2019|title=The killing of large species is pushing them towards extinction, study finds|url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/feb/06/the-killing-of-large-species-is-pushing-them-towards-extinction-study-finds|work=The Guardian|access-date=February 13, 2019|archive-date=February 7, 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190207231757/https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/feb/06/the-killing-of-large-species-is-pushing-them-towards-extinction-study-finds|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|first=W. J.|last=Ripple|display-authors=etal.|year=2019|title=Are we eating the world's megafauna to extinction?|journal=Conservation Letters|volume=12|issue=3|page=e12627|doi=10.1111/conl.12627|doi-access=free|bibcode=2019ConL...12E2627R }}</ref>


A number of other [[Extinction event|mass extinction]]s occurred earlier in Earth's geologic history, in which some or all of the megafauna of the time also died out. Famously, in the [[Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event]] the non-avian dinosaurs and most other giant reptilians were eliminated. However, the earlier mass extinctions were more global and not so selective for megafauna; i.e., many species of other types, including plants, marine invertebrates<ref name="Alroy">{{Cite journal
A number of other [[Extinction event|mass extinction]]s occurred earlier in Earth's geologic history, in which some or all of the megafauna of the time also died out. Famously, in the [[Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event]], the non-avian dinosaurs and most other giant reptiles were eliminated. However, the earlier mass extinctions were more global and not so selective for megafauna; i.e., many species of other types, including plants, marine invertebrates<ref name="Alroy">{{Cite journal
| last = Alroy | first = J. | title = Dynamics of origination and extinction in the marine fossil record
| last = Alroy | first = J. | title = Dynamics of origination and extinction in the marine fossil record
| journal = [[Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America|PNAS]]
| journal = [[Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America|PNAS]]
| volume = 105 Suppl 1 | pages = 11536–11542 | date = 2008-08-12 | pmid = 18695240
| volume = 105 Suppl 1 | pages = 11536–11542 | date = 2008-08-12 | pmid = 18695240
| pmc = 2556405 | doi = 10.1073/pnas.0802597105 |bibcode = 2008PNAS..10511536A
| pmc = 2556405 | doi = 10.1073/pnas.0802597105 |bibcode = 2008PNAS..10511536A
| issue = Supplement_1| doi-access = free }}</ref> and plankton, went extinct as well. Thus, the earlier events must have been caused by more generalized types of disturbances to the [[biosphere]].
| issue = Supplement_1| doi-access = free }}</ref> and plankton, went extinct as well. Thus, the earlier events must have been caused by more generalized types of disturbances to the [[biosphere]].<ref>{{Cite journal |last=D'Hondt |first=Steven |date=2005-12-01 |title=Consequences of the Cretaceous/Paleogene Mass Extinction for Marine Ecosystems |url=https://www.annualreviews.org/doi/10.1146/annurev.ecolsys.35.021103.105715 |journal=Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics |language=en |volume=36 |issue=1 |pages=295–317 |doi=10.1146/annurev.ecolsys.35.021103.105715 |issn=1543-592X}}</ref>


===Consequences of depletion of megafauna===
===Consequences of depletion of megafauna===
Depletion of herbivorous megafauna results in increased growth of woody vegetation,<ref name=":3">{{Cite journal |last1=Malhi |first1=Yadvinder |last2=Doughty |first2=Christopher E. |last3=Galetti |first3=Mauro |last4=Smith |first4=Felisa A. |last5=Svenning |first5=Jens-Christian |last6=Terborgh |first6=John W. |date=2016-01-26 |title=Megafauna and ecosystem function from the Pleistocene to the Anthropocene |journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences |language=en |volume=113 |issue=4 |pages=838–846 |doi=10.1073/pnas.1502540113 |doi-access=free |issn=0027-8424 |pmc=4743772 |pmid=26811442}}</ref> and a consequent increase in [[wildfire]] frequency.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Johnson |first=C.N. |date=2009-07-22 |title=Ecological consequences of Late Quaternary extinctions of megafauna |journal=Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences |language=en |volume=276 |issue=1667 |pages=2509–2519 |doi=10.1098/rspb.2008.1921 |issn=0962-8452 |pmc=2684593 |pmid=19324773}}</ref> Megafauna may help to suppress the growth of invasive plants.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Mungi |first1=Ninad Avinash |last2=Jhala |first2=Yadvendradev V. |last3=Qureshi |first3=Qamar |last4=le Roux |first4=Elizabeth |last5=Svenning |first5=Jens-Christian |date=October 2023 |title=Megaherbivores provide biotic resistance against alien plant dominance |url=https://www.nature.com/articles/s41559-023-02181-y |journal=Nature Ecology & Evolution |language=en |volume=7 |issue=10 |pages=1645–1653 |doi=10.1038/s41559-023-02181-y |issn=2397-334X}}</ref> Large herbivores and carnivores can suppress the abundance of smaller animals, resulting in their population increase when megafauna are removed.<ref name=":3" />


====Effect on nutrient transport====
==== Effect on nutrient transport ====
Megafauna play a significant role in the lateral transport of mineral nutrients in an ecosystem, tending to translocate them from areas of high to those of lower abundance. They do so by their movement between the time they consume the nutrient and the time they release it through elimination (or, to a much lesser extent, through decomposition after death).<ref name="Wolf2013">{{cite journal|last1=Wolf|first1=A.|last2=Doughty|first2=C. E.|last3=Malhi|first3=Y.|author-link3=Yadvinder Malhi|title=Lateral Diffusion of Nutrients by Mammalian Herbivores in Terrestrial Ecosystems|journal=[[PLoS ONE]]|volume= 8|issue= 8|year= 2013|pages= e71352|doi= 10.1371/journal.pone.0071352|pmid=23951141|pmc=3739793|bibcode=2013PLoSO...871352W|doi-access=free}}</ref> In South America's [[Amazon Basin]], it is estimated that such lateral diffusion was reduced over 98% following the megafaunal extinctions that occurred roughly 12,500 years ago.<ref name = "Marshall_2013">{{cite magazine | last = Marshall | first = M. | title = Ecosystems still feel the pain of ancient extinctions | magazine = [[New Scientist]] | date = 2013-08-11 | url = https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn24026-ecosystems-still-feel-the-pain-of-ancient-extinctions.html | access-date = 2013-08-12}}</ref><ref name="DoughtyWolf2013">{{cite journal|last1=Doughty|first1=C. E.|last2=Wolf|first2=A.|last3=Malhi|first3=Y.|author-link3=Yadvinder Malhi|title=The legacy of the Pleistocene megafauna extinctions on nutrient availability in Amazonia|journal= [[Nature Geoscience]]|date= 2013-08-11|doi= 10.1038/ngeo1895|volume= 6|issue= 9|pages= 761–764|bibcode= 2013NatGe...6..761D}}</ref> Given that [[phosphorus]] availability is thought to limit productivity in much of the region, the decrease in its transport from the western part of the basin and from floodplains (both of which derive their supply from the uplift of the [[Andes]]) to other areas is thought to have significantly impacted the region's ecology, and the effects may not yet have reached their limits.<ref name="DoughtyWolf2013"/> In the sea, cetaceans and pinnipeds that feed at depth are thought to translocate nitrogen from deep to shallow water, enhancing [[Primary production#Oceanic production|ocean productivity]], and counteracting the activity of [[zooplankton]], which tend to do the opposite.<ref name="Roman2010">{{cite journal|last1= Roman|first1= J.|last2= McCarthy|first2= J.J.|title=The Whale Pump: Marine Mammals Enhance Primary Productivity in a Coastal Basin |journal=PLOS ONE|volume= 5|issue= 10|year= 2010|page= e13255|doi= 10.1371/journal.pone.0013255|pmc= 2952594|pmid= 20949007|bibcode= 2010PLoSO...513255R|doi-access= free}}</ref>
Megafauna play a significant role in the lateral transport of mineral nutrients in an ecosystem, tending to translocate them from areas of high to those of lower abundance. They do so by their movement between the time they consume the nutrient and the time they release it through elimination (or, to a much lesser extent, through decomposition after death).<ref name="Wolf2013">{{cite journal|last1=Wolf|first1=A.|last2=Doughty|first2=C. E.|last3=Malhi|first3=Y.|author-link3=Yadvinder Malhi|title=Lateral Diffusion of Nutrients by Mammalian Herbivores in Terrestrial Ecosystems|journal=[[PLoS ONE]]|volume= 8|issue= 8|year= 2013|pages= e71352|doi= 10.1371/journal.pone.0071352|pmid=23951141|pmc=3739793|bibcode=2013PLoSO...871352W|doi-access=free}}</ref> In South America's [[Amazon Basin]], it is estimated that such lateral diffusion was reduced over 98% following the megafaunal extinctions that occurred roughly 12,500 years ago.<ref name = "Marshall_2013">{{cite magazine | last = Marshall | first = M. | title = Ecosystems still feel the pain of ancient extinctions | magazine = [[New Scientist]] | date = 2013-08-11 | url = https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn24026-ecosystems-still-feel-the-pain-of-ancient-extinctions.html | access-date = 2013-08-12 | archive-date = 2015-07-04 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20150704181952/https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn24026-ecosystems-still-feel-the-pain-of-ancient-extinctions.html | url-status = live }}</ref><ref name="DoughtyWolf2013">{{cite journal|last1=Doughty|first1=C. E.|last2=Wolf|first2=A.|last3=Malhi|first3=Y.|author-link3=Yadvinder Malhi|title=The legacy of the Pleistocene megafauna extinctions on nutrient availability in Amazonia|journal= [[Nature Geoscience]]|date= 2013-08-11|doi= 10.1038/ngeo1895|volume= 6|issue= 9|pages= 761–764|bibcode= 2013NatGe...6..761D}}</ref> Given that [[phosphorus]] availability is thought to limit productivity in much of the region, the decrease in its transport from the western part of the basin and from floodplains (both of which derive their supply from the uplift of the [[Andes]]) to other areas is thought to have significantly impacted the region's ecology, and the effects may not yet have reached their limits.<ref name="DoughtyWolf2013"/> In the sea, cetaceans and pinnipeds that feed at depth are thought to translocate nitrogen from deep to shallow water, enhancing [[Primary production#Oceanic production|ocean productivity]], and counteracting the activity of [[zooplankton]], which tend to do the opposite.<ref name="Roman2010">{{cite journal|last1= Roman|first1= J.|last2= McCarthy|first2= J.J.|title=The Whale Pump: Marine Mammals Enhance Primary Productivity in a Coastal Basin |journal=PLOS ONE|volume= 5|issue= 10|year= 2010|page= e13255|doi= 10.1371/journal.pone.0013255|pmc= 2952594|pmid= 20949007|bibcode= 2010PLoSO...513255R|doi-access= free}}</ref>


====Effect on methane emissions====
====Effect on methane emissions====
Large populations of megaherbivores have the potential to contribute greatly to the atmospheric concentration of [[methane]], which is an important [[greenhouse gas]]. Modern [[ruminant]] [[herbivores]] produce methane as a byproduct of [[foregut fermentation]] in digestion, and release it through belching or flatulence. Today, around 20% of annual [[methane emissions]] come from livestock methane release. In the [[Mesozoic]], it has been estimated that [[sauropod]]s could have emitted 520 million tons of methane to the atmosphere annually,<ref name = "Wilkinson">{{cite journal
Large populations of megaherbivores have the potential to contribute greatly to the atmospheric concentration of [[methane]], which is an important [[greenhouse gas]]. Modern [[ruminant]] [[herbivores]] produce methane as a byproduct of [[foregut fermentation]] in digestion and release it through belching or flatulence. Today, around 20% of annual [[methane emissions]] come from livestock methane release. In the [[Mesozoic]], it has been estimated that [[sauropod]]s could have emitted 520 million tons of methane to the atmosphere annually,<ref name = "Wilkinson">{{cite journal
| last = Wilkinson | first = D. M. |author2=Nisbet, E. G. |author3=Ruxton, G. D.
| last = Wilkinson | first = D. M. |author2=Nisbet, E. G. |author3=Ruxton, G. D.
| title = Could methane produced by sauropod dinosaurs have helped drive Mesozoic climate warmth?
| title = Could methane produced by sauropod dinosaurs have helped drive Mesozoic climate warmth?
| journal = [[Current Biology]] | volume = 22 | issue = 9 | pages = R292–R293 | date = 2012-05-08
| journal = [[Current Biology]] | volume = 22 | issue = 9 | pages = R292–R293 | date = 2012-05-08
| doi = 10.1016/j.cub.2012.03.042 | pmid = 22575462 | doi-access = free }}</ref> contributing to the warmer climate of the time (up to 10&nbsp;°C warmer than at present).<ref name = "Wilkinson"/><ref name = "sauropod_methane">{{cite web
| doi = 10.1016/j.cub.2012.03.042 | pmid = 22575462 | doi-access = free | bibcode = 2012CBio...22.R292W }}</ref> contributing to the warmer climate of the time (up to 10 °C (18 °F) warmer than at present).<ref name = "Wilkinson"/><ref name = "sauropod_methane">{{cite web | title = Dinosaur gases 'warmed the Earth' | work = BBC Nature News | date = 2012-05-07 | url = http://www.bbc.co.uk/nature/17953792 | access-date = 2012-05-08 | archive-date = 2015-12-01 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20151201084318/http://www.bbc.co.uk/nature/17953792 | url-status = live }}</ref> This large emission follows from the enormous estimated biomass of sauropods, and because methane production of individual herbivores is believed to be almost proportional to their mass.<ref name = "Wilkinson"/>
| title = Dinosaur gases 'warmed the Earth' | work = BBC Nature News
| date = 2012-05-07 | url = http://www.bbc.co.uk/nature/17953792
| access-date = 2012-05-08}}</ref> This large emission follows from the enormous estimated biomass of sauropods, and because methane production of individual herbivores is believed to be almost proportional to their mass.<ref name = "Wilkinson"/>


Recent studies have indicated that the extinction of megafaunal herbivores may have caused a reduction in [[atmospheric methane]]. This hypothesis is relatively new.<ref name = "Smith">{{Cite journal
Recent studies have indicated that the extinction of megafaunal herbivores may have caused a reduction in [[atmospheric methane]]. This hypothesis is relatively new.<ref name = "Smith">{{Cite journal
Line 314: Line 277:
| title = Methane emissions from bison—An historic herd estimate for the North American Great Plains
| title = Methane emissions from bison—An historic herd estimate for the North American Great Plains
| journal = [[Agricultural and Forest Meteorology]] | volume = 150 | issue = 3 | pages = 473–577
| journal = [[Agricultural and Forest Meteorology]] | volume = 150 | issue = 3 | pages = 473–577
| date = 2010-03-15 | doi = 10.1016/j.agrformet.2009.11.019| bibcode =2010AgFM..150..473K}}</ref> Another study examined the change in the methane concentration in the atmosphere at the end of the [[Pleistocene epoch]] after the extinction of megafauna in the Americas. After early humans migrated to the Americas about 13,000 [[Before Present|BP]], their hunting and other associated ecological impacts led to the extinction of many megafaunal species there. Calculations suggest that this extinction decreased methane production by about 9.6 million tons per year. This suggests that the absence of megafaunal methane emissions may have contributed to the abrupt climatic cooling at the onset of the [[Younger Dryas]].<ref name = "Smith"/> The decrease in atmospheric methane that occurred at that time, as recorded in [[ice core]]s, was 2-4 times more rapid than any other decrease in the last half million years, suggesting that an unusual mechanism was at work.<ref name = "Smith"/>
| date = 2010-03-15 | doi = 10.1016/j.agrformet.2009.11.019| bibcode =2010AgFM..150..473K}}</ref> Another study examined the change in the methane concentration in the atmosphere at the end of the [[Pleistocene epoch]] after the extinction of megafauna in the Americas. After early humans migrated to the Americas about 13,000 [[Before Present|BP]], their hunting and other associated ecological impacts led to the extinction of many megafaunal species there. Calculations suggest that this extinction decreased methane production by about 9.6 million tons per year. This suggests that the absence of megafaunal methane emissions may have contributed to the abrupt climatic cooling at the onset of the [[Younger Dryas]].<ref name = "Smith"/> The decrease in atmospheric methane that occurred at that time, as recorded in [[ice core]]s, was 2 to 4 times more rapid than any other decrease in the last half million years, suggesting that an unusual mechanism was at work.<ref name = "Smith"/>


==Examples==
==Gallery==
The following are some notable examples of animals often considered as megafauna (in the sense of the "large animal" definition). This list is not intended to be exhaustive:


===Pleistocene extinct megafauna===
*Clade [[Synapsida]]
<gallery>
**Class [[Mammalia]] ([[Phylogenetic nomenclature|phylogenetically]], a [[clade]] within [[Therapsid]]a; see below)
File:Dinornis novaezealandiae.png|[[Moa]] ''([[Dinornis]]'' pictured)
***Infraclass [[Metatheria]]
File:Diprotodon optatum (2).jpg|''[[Diprotodon optatum]]''
****Order [[Diprotodontia]]
File:Varanus priscus Melbourne Museum.jpg|"[[Megalania]]" (''[[Varanus priscus]]''),
*****The [[red kangaroo]] (''Macropus rufus'') is the largest living [[Australia]]n mammal and [[marsupial]] at a weight of up to {{convert|85|kg|lb|abbr=on}}. However, its extinct relative, the [[Procoptodon|giant short-faced kangaroo]] ''Procoptodon goliah'' reached {{convert|230|kg|abbr=on}},<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Helgen et. all|first=Kristofer M.|date=2006|title=Ecological and evolutionary significance of sizes of giant extinct kangaroos|url=https://repository.si.edu/bitstream/handle/10088/8325/vz_Helgen_et_al_2006_Australian_Journal_of_Zoology_megafaunal_kangaroos.pdf|journal=Australian Journal of Zoology|volume=54|issue=4|pages=293–301|via=si.edu|doi=10.1071/ZO05077}}</ref> while extinct [[diprotodon]]ts attained the largest size of any marsupial in history, up to an estimated {{convert|2750|kg|abbr=on}}. The extinct marsupial lion (''[[Thylacoleo carnifex]]''), at up to {{convert|160|kg|lb|abbr=on}} was much larger than any extant carnivorous marsupial.
File:Panthera leo atrox Sergiodlarosa.jpg|[[American lion]]s (''Panthera atrox''')'''''
***Infraclass [[Eutheria]]
File:Woolly mammoth (Mammuthus primigenius) - Mauricio Antón.jpg|alt=Woolly mammoths vanished after humans invaded their habitat in Eurasia and N. America.|[[Woolly mammoth]]
****Superorder [[Afrotheria]]
File:Archaeoindris fontoynonti.jpg|The [[subfossil lemur]] ''[[Archaeoindris]]''
*****Order [[Proboscidea]]
File:Giant Haasts eagle.jpg|[[Haast's eagle]]
******[[Elephants]] are the largest living land animals. They and their relatives arose in [[Africa]], but until recently had a nearly worldwide distribution. The [[African bush elephant]] (''Loxodonta africana'') has a shoulder height of up to {{convert|4.3|m|ft|0|abbr=on}} and weighs up to {{convert|10.4|tonnes|ST}}.<ref name=probos_mass>{{Cite journal | last1 = Larramendi | first1 = A. | year = 2016 | title = Shoulder height, body mass and shape of proboscideans | journal = Acta Palaeontologica Polonica | volume = 61 | issue = 3 | pages = 537–574 | doi = 10.4202/app.00136.2014 | s2cid = 2092950 | url = https://www.app.pan.pl/archive/published/app61/app001362014.pdf | access-date = 2018-03-22| doi-access = free }}</ref> Among recently extinct proboscideans, [[mammoth]]s (''Mammuthus'') were close relatives of elephants, while [[mastodon]]s (''Mammut'') were much more distantly related. The [[steppe mammoth]] (''M. trogontherii'') is estimated to have commonly weighed around 10 tonnes, making it possibly the largest [[Proboscidea|proboscid]], which would make it the second largest land mammal after [[Indricotheriinae|indricotherines]].
File:Macrauchenia patachonica Life Reconstruction.png|Restoration of ''[[Macrauchenia]]'', a camel-sized member of the extinct ungulate order [[Litopterna]]
*****Order [[Sirenia]]
File:Doedicurus and Glyptodon.jpg|Life restoration of the [[glyptodont|glyptodonts]] ''[[Doedicurus]]'' (front) and ''[[Glyptodon]]''
******The largest sirenian at up to {{convert|1500|kg|lb|abbr=on}} is the [[West Indian manatee]] (''Trichechus manatus''). [[Steller's sea cow]] (''Hydrodamalis gigas'') was probably around five times as massive, but was exterminated by humans within 27 years of its discovery off the remote [[Commander Islands]] in 1741. In prehistoric times this sea cow also lived along the coasts of northeastern [[Asia]] and northwestern [[North America]]; it was apparently eliminated from these more accessible locations by aboriginal hunters.
</gallery>
****Superorder [[Xenarthra]]
*****Order [[Cingulata]]
******The [[Glyptodontidae|glyptodonts]] were a group of large, heavily armored [[Ankylosauria|ankylosaur]]-like [[xenarthra]]ns related to living [[armadillos]]. They originated in [[South America]], invaded North America during the [[Great American Interchange]], and went extinct at the end of the [[Pleistocene]] [[Series (stratigraphy)|epoch]].<ref name = "Fariña2013">{{cite book|author1=Fariña, Richard A.|author2=Vizcaíno, Sergio F.|author3=De Iuliis, Gerry |title=Megafauna: Giant Beasts of Pleistocene South America|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=kUAKgNfiAvoC|date=22 May 2013|publisher=Indiana University Press|isbn=978-0-253-00719-3|oclc= 779244424}}</ref>
*****Order [[Pilosa]]
******[[Ground sloth]]s were another group of slow, terrestrial xenarthrans, related to modern [[sloth|tree sloth]]s. They had a similar history, although they reached North America earlier, and spread farther north (e.g., ''[[Megalonyx]]''). The largest genera, ''[[Megatherium]]'' and ''[[Eremotherium]]'', reached sizes comparable to elephants.<ref name = "Fariña2013" />
****Superorder [[Euarchontoglires]]
*****Order [[Primates]]
******The largest living primate, at up to {{convert|266|kg|lb|abbr=on}}, is the [[gorilla]] (''[[Gorilla beringei]]'' and ''[[Gorilla gorilla]]'', with three of four subspecies being [[critically endangered]]). The extinct Malagasy [[sloth lemur]] ''[[Archaeoindris]]'' reached a similar size, while the extinct ''[[Gigantopithecus#Gigantopithecus blacki|Gigantopithecus blacki]]'' of [[Southeast Asia]] is believed to have been larger yet, although probably less than twice as large, contrary to early estimates (the absence of postcranial remains makes its size difficult to judge).<ref name="Zhang2017">{{cite journal|last1= Zhang|first1= Y.|last2= Harrison|first2= T.|title= ''Gigantopithecus blacki'': a giant ape from the Pleistocene of Asia revisited|journal= American Journal of Physical Anthropology|volume= 162|issue= S63|year= 2017|pages= 153–177|doi= 10.1002/ajpa.23150|pmid= 28105715|doi-access= free}}</ref> Some populations of [[Archaic humans|archaic ''Homo'']] were significantly larger on average than recent ''[[Homo sapiens]]'';<ref name = "Ruff">{{cite journal
| last = Ruff | first = C. B. |author2=Trinkaus, E. |author3=Holliday, T. W.
| title = Body mass and encephalization in Pleistocene Homo
| journal = [[Nature (journal)|Nature]]
| volume = 387 | issue = 6629| pages = 173–176
| date = 1997-05-08 | doi = 10.1038/387173a0 | pmid = 9144286 |bibcode = 1997Natur.387..173R| s2cid = 4320413 }}</ref><ref name = "Grine">{{Cite journal
| last = Grine | first = F. E. |author2=Jumgers, W. L. |author3=Tobias, P. V. |author4=Pearson, O. M.
| title = Fossil ''Homo'' femur from Berg Aukas, northern Namibia
| journal = [[American Journal of Physical Anthropology]] | volume = 97 | issue = 2 | pages = 151–185
| date = June 1995| doi = 10.1002/ajpa.1330970207 | pmid = 7653506}}</ref> for example, ''[[Homo heidelbergensis]]'' in southern Africa may have commonly reached {{convert|7|ft|m}} in height,<ref name = "Our_Story">{{Cite web
| last = Smith | first = Chris |author2=Burger, Lee
| title = Our Story: Human Ancestor Fossils
| work = [[The Naked Scientists]]
| date = November 2007
| url = http://www.thenakedscientists.com/HTML/content/interviews/interview/833/
| access-date = 2011-02-19}}</ref> while [[Neanderthal]]s were about 30% more massive.<ref name = "Kappelman">{{Cite journal
| last = Kappelman | first = John | title = They might be giants
| journal = [[Nature (journal)|Nature]] | volume = 387 | issue = 6629| pages = 126–127
| date = 1997-05-08
| doi = 10.1038/387126a0 | pmid = 9144276 |bibcode = 1997Natur.387..126K| s2cid = 4328242 | doi-access = free }}</ref>
*****Order [[Rodent]]ia
******The extant [[capybara]] (''Hydrochoerus hydrochaeris'') of South America, the largest living rodent, weighs up to {{convert|80|kg|lb|abbr=on}}.<ref name="Ferraz2005">{{cite journal|last1=de Barros Ferraz|first1= K.M.P.M.|last2= Bonach|first2= K.|last3= Verdade|first3= L.M.|title= Relationship between body mass and body length in capybaras (''Hydrochoerus hydrochaeris'')|journal= Biota Neotropica|volume= 5|issue= 1|year= 2005|pages= 197–200|doi= 10.1590/S1676-06032005000100020|doi-access= free}}</ref> Several recently extinct North American forms were larger: the capybara ''[[Neochoerus pinckneyi]]'' (another [[Neotropical realm|Neotropic]] migrant) was about 40% heavier on average; the [[Castoroides|giant beaver]] (''Castoroides ohioensis'') was similar. The extinct [[blunt-toothed giant hutia]] (''Amblyrhiza inundata'') of several [[Caribbean]] islands may have been larger still. However, several million years ago South America harbored much more massive rodents. ''[[Phoberomys pattersoni]]'', known from a nearly full skeleton, probably reached {{convert|700|kg|lb|abbr=on}}. Fragmentary remains suggest that ''[[Josephoartigasia monesi]]'' grew to upwards of {{convert|1000|kg|lb|-2|abbr=on}}.
****Superorder [[Laurasiatheria]]
*****Order [[Carnivora]]
******The largest extant cats are in genus ''[[Panthera]]'', including the [[tiger]] (''P. tigris'') and [[lion]] (''P. leo'').<ref name="Catsg2017">{{cite journal |authors=Kitchener, A.C., Breitenmoser-Würsten, C., Eizirik, E., Gentry, A., Werdelin, L., Wilting, A. and Yamaguchi, N. |year=2017 |title= A revised taxonomy of the Felidae: The final report of the Cat Classification Task Force of the IUCN Cat Specialist Group |journal=Cat News |issue=Special Issue 11 |url=http://www.catsg.org/fileadmin/filesharing/5.Cat_News/5.3._Special_Issues/5.3.10._SI_11/CN_Special_Issue_11_Revised_taxonomy_of_the_Felidae.pdf}}</ref> The [[Siberian tiger]] (''P. t. altaica'') should be the biggest wild cat according to [[Bergmann's rule]], and has been regarded as such by some<ref name="BCKM1993">{{cite book |author=Brakefield, Tom |title=Big Cats: Kingdom of Might |publisher=Voyageur Press |url= https://archive.org/details/bigcatskingdomof0000brak |url-access=registration |page=[https://archive.org/details/bigcatskingdomof0000brak/page/44 44] |year=1993 |isbn=978-0-89658-329-0}}</ref><ref name="NowellJackson1996">{{Cite book |author1=Nowell, Kristin |author2=Jackson, Peter |title=Wild Cats: Status Survey and Conservation Action Plan |url=http://carnivoractionplans1.free.fr/wildcats.pdf |year=1996 |publisher=IUCN/SSC Cat Specialist Group |location=Gland, Switzerland |isbn=978-2-8317-0045-8 |page= 56}}</ref> but this is disputable.<ref name="TOTW2010">{{cite book |authors=Kitchener, A. and Yamaguchi, N. |year=2009 |chapter=What is a Tiger? Biogeography, Morphology, and Taxonomy |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=XFIbjBEQolMC&pg=pg |title=Tigers of the World: The Science, Politics and Conservation of ''Panthera tigris'' |editor1=Tilson, R. |editor2=Nyhus, P. J. |publisher=Academic Press |isbn=978-0-08-094751-8 |pages=53–84}}</ref> Historically, wild Siberian tigers have declined in size, and they are now smaller than Bengal tigers (''P. t. tigris'');<ref name="Slaght2005">{{cite book|author=Slaght, J. C., Miquelle, D. G., Nikolaev, I. G., Goodrich, J. M., Smirnov, E. N., Traylor-Holzer, K., Christie, S., Arjanova, T., Smith, J. L. D. and Karanth, K. U. |year=2005 |chapter=Chapter 6. Who‘s king of the beasts? Historical and contemporary data on the body weight of wild and captive Amur tigers in comparison with other subspecies |title=Tigers in Sikhote-Alin Zapovednik: Ecology and Conservation |editor1=D. G. Miquelle |editor2=E. N. Smirnov |editor3=J.M. Goodrich |publisher=PSP |location=Vladivostok, Russia |chapter-url=http://fishowls.com/Slaght%20et%20al%202005.pdf |pages=25–35|language=ru}}</ref> however, Siberian tigers do still tend to be the largest of tigers in captivity, reaching about {{convert|320|kg|lb|abbr=on}} in weight.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.ligerworld.com/samson-the-biggest-tiger.html|title = Samson - the Biggest Tiger}}</ref> ''Panthera'' species are distinguished by [[morphology (biology)|morphological]] features which enable them to roar. Larger extinct cats include the [[American lion]] (''P. atrox'') and the South American [[saber-toothed cat]] (''[[Smilodon populator]]'').
******[[Bear]]s are large carnivorans of the [[Caniformia|caniform suborder]]. The largest living forms are the [[polar bear]] (''Ursus maritimus''), with a body weight of up to {{convert|800|kg|lb|abbr=on}},<ref name="DeMaster1981">{{cite journal |last1= DeMaster|first1= D.P.|last2= Stirling|first2= I.|author2-link= Ian Stirling (biologist) |date=8 May 1981 |title= ''Ursus maritimus'' |journal= Mammalian Species |issue= 145|pages= 1–7|doi= 10.2307/3504138 |jstor= 3503828}}</ref> and the nearly as large [[Kodiak bear]] (''Ursus arctos middendorffi''),<ref name="Pasitschniak1981">{{cite journal |last1= Pasitschniak-Arts|first1= M.|date=23 April 1993|title= ''Ursus arctos'' |journal= Mammalian Species |issue= 439|pages= 1–10|doi= 10.2307/3503828 |jstor= 3504138|doi-access= free}}</ref> consistent with Bergmann's rule. ''[[Arctotherium]] augustans'', an extinct [[Arctotherium|short-faced bear]] from South America, was the largest predatory land mammal ever with an estimated average weight of {{convert|1600|kg|lb|abbr=on}}.<ref name = "Soibelzon">{{Cite journal
| last = Soibelzon | first = L. H. |author2=Schubert, B. W.
| title = The Largest Known Bear, ''Arctotherium angustidens'', from the Early Pleistocene Pampean Region of Argentina: With a Discussion of Size and Diet Trends in Bears
| journal = [[Journal of Paleontology]] | volume = 85 | issue = 1 | pages = 69–75
| date = January 2011 | url = http://jpaleontol.geoscienceworld.org/cgi/content/abstract/85/1/69
| doi = 10.1666/10-037.1 | s2cid = 129585554 | access-date = 2011-06-01}}</ref>
******[[Pinniped|Seals, sea lions, and walruses]] are amphibious marine carnivorans that evolved from bearlike ancestors. The [[southern elephant seal]] (''Mirounga leonina'') of [[Antarctic]] and [[subantarctic]] waters is the largest carnivoran of all time, with bull males reaching a maximum length of {{convert|6|-|7|m|ft|0|abbr=on}} and maximum weight of {{convert|5000|kg|lb|abbr=on}}.
*****Order [[Perissodactyla]]
******[[Tapir]]s are browsing animals, with a short prehensile snout and pig-like form that appears to have changed little in 20 million years. They inhabit [[tropical rainforest|tropical forests]] of Southeast Asia and South and Central America, and include the largest surviving land animals of the latter two regions. There are four species.
******[[Rhinoceros]]es are [[odd-toed ungulates]] with horns made of [[keratin]], the same type of [[protein]] composing hair. They are among the second-largest living land mammals at 850-3,800&nbsp;kg. Three of five extant species are [[IUCN Red List critically endangered species (Animalia)#Rhinocerotidae|critically endangered]]. Their extinct [[central Asia]]n relatives the [[Indricotheriinae|indricotherines]] were the largest terrestrial mammals of all time.[[File:Megafauna1.jpg|thumb|Rhinoceros, from [[Dürer's Rhinoceros|Dürer's woodcut]]]]
*****Order [[Artiodactyla]]
******[[Giraffes]] (''Giraffa spp.'') are the tallest living land animals, reaching heights of up to nearly {{convert|6|m|ft|0|abbr=on}}. The average weight is 1,192&nbsp;kg (2,628&nbsp;lb) for an adult male and 828&nbsp;kg (1,825&nbsp;lb) for an adult female with maximum weights of 1,930&nbsp;kg (4,250&nbsp;lb) and 1,180&nbsp;kg (2,600&nbsp;lb) recorded for males and females, respectively.
******[[Bovinae|Bovine ungulates]] include the largest surviving land animals of [[Europe]] and North America. The [[Wild water buffalo|water buffalo]] (''Bubalis arnee''), [[bison]] (''[[Bison bison]]'' and ''[[Wisent|B. bonasus]]''), and [[gaur]] (''Bos gaurus'') can all grow to weights of over {{convert|1000|kg|lb|abbr=on}}.
******The [[List of semiaquatic tetrapods|semiaquatic]] [[hippopotamus]] (''Hippopotamus amphibius'') is the heaviest living member of the order [[even-toed ungulate|Cetartiodactyla]] after the cetaceans. Mean adult weight is around 1,500&nbsp;kg (3,300&nbsp;lb) and 1,300&nbsp;kg (2,900&nbsp;lb) for males and females respectively, with large males reaching over 3,200&nbsp;kg (7,100&nbsp;lb). The hippopotamus and the much smaller [[critically endangered species|critically endangered]] [[pygmy hippo]] (''Choeropsis liberiensis'') are believed to be the [[Cetartiodactyla#Kin to hippos|closest extant relatives]] of cetaceans. Hippopotamuses are among the megafaunal species [[Hippopotamus#Aggression|most dangerous]] to humans.<ref name = "SI">{{cite web
| last = Swift | first = E. M. | title = What Big Mouths They Have: Travelers in Africa who run afoul of hippos may not live to tell the tale
| work = Sports Illustrated Vault | publisher = [[Time Inc.]] | date = 1997-11-17
| url = https://vault.si.com/vault/1997/11/17/what-big-mouths-they-have-travelers-in-africa-who-run-afoul-of-hippos-may-not-live-to-tell-the-tale
| access-date = 2011-11-16}}</ref>
******Infraorder [[Cetacea]]
*******[[Cetacea|Whales, dolphins, and porpoises]] are marine mammals. The [[blue whale]] (''Balaenoptera musculus'') is the largest [[baleen whale]] and the largest animal that has ever lived, at {{convert|30|m|ft|abbr=off}}<ref>^ J. Calambokidis and G. Steiger (1998). Blue Whales. Voyageur Press. {{ISBN|0-89658-338-4}}.</ref> in length and 170 tonnes (190 short tons)<ref>^ "Animal Records". Smithsonian National Zoological Park. Retrieved 2007-05-29.</ref> or more in weight. The [[sperm whale]] (''Physeter macrocephalus'') is the largest [[toothed whale]] and one of the largest predators in vertebrate history, as well as the planet's loudest and [[Sperm whale#Brain|brainiest animal]] (with a [[brain]] about five times as massive as a [[human brain|human's]]). The [[killer whale]] (''Orcinus orca'') is the largest dolphin.
**Order [[Pelycosauria]] (traditional; [[paraphyletic]])
***''[[Cotylorhynchus]]'' was a large, big-clawed, herbivorous [[Caseidae|caseid]] of Early [[Permian]] North America, reaching {{convert|6|m|ft|abbr=on}} and 2 tonnes.
**Order [[Therapsida]]
*** ''[[Anteosaurus]]'' was a [[headbutting]], semiaquatic, carnivorous [[dinocephalia]]n of [[Guadalupian|Middle Permian]] South Africa. It reached {{convert|5|–|6|m|ft|abbr=on}} long, and weighed about {{convert|500|–|600|kg|lb|abbr=on}}.<ref>[http://www.palaeos.org/Anteosaurus ''Anteosaurus''] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160314043623/http://www.palaeos.org/Anteosaurus |date=2016-03-14 }}. Palaeos.org (2013-04-22)</ref>
*** ''[[Lisowicia]]'' was an elephant-sized (9 tonne) herbivorous [[kannemeyeriiform]] [[dicynodont]] of Late Triassic Europe.<ref name="Sulej2019">{{cite journal|last1=Sulej|first1=T.|last2=Niedźwiedzki|first2=G.|title=An elephant-sized Late Triassic synapsid with erect limbs|journal=Science|volume=363|issue=6422|year=2019|pages=78–80|doi=10.1126/science.aal4853|pmid=30467179|doi-access=free|bibcode=2019Sci...363...78S}}</ref><ref name="NYT-20190104">{{cite news |last=St. Fleur |first=Nicholas |title=An Elephant-Size Relative of Mammals That Grazed Alongside Dinosaurs |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2019/01/04/science/dicynodonts-fossils-poland.html |date=4 January 2019 |work=[[The New York Times]] |access-date=6 January 2019 }}</ref>
*Clade [[Sauropsida]]
**Class [[Aves]] (phylogenetically, a clade within [[Coelurosauria]], a [[taxon]] within the order Saurischia; see below)
***Order [[Struthioniformes]]
****The [[ratite]]s are an ancient and diverse group of [[flightless bird]]s that are found on fragments of the former [[supercontinent]] [[Gondwana]]. The largest living bird, the [[ostrich]] (''Struthio camelus'') was surpassed by the extinct ''[[Vorombe]]'' of [[Madagascar]], the heaviest of the group at up to ({{convert|860|kg|lb|abbr=on}}), and the extinct [[Dinornis|giant moa]] (''Dinornis'') of [[New Zealand]], the tallest, growing to heights of {{convert|3.4|m|ft|0|abbr=on}}. The latter two are examples of [[island gigantism]].
***Order [[Gastornithiformes]]
****Extinct [[Dromornithidae|dromornithid]]s of Australia such as ''[[Dromornis]]'' approached the largest ratites in size. (Due to its small size for a continent and its isolation, Australia is sometimes viewed as the [[Australia#Geography and climate|world's largest island]]; thus, these species could also be considered insular giants.)
***Order [[Cathartiformes]]
****The extinct [[condor]]-like [[teratorn]] ''[[Argentavis]]'' of South America had an estimated wing span of {{convert|5|to|6|m|ft|abbr=on}} and a mass of approximately {{convert|70|kg|lb|abbr=on}}, making it the best example of a megafaunal flying bird.
**Class [[Reptilia]] (traditional; [[paraphyletic]])
***Order [[Saurischia]]
****Saurischian [[dinosaur]]s of the [[Jurassic]] and [[Cretaceous]] include [[Sauropoda|sauropod]]s, the longest (at up to {{convert|40|m|ft|-1|abbr=on|disp=or}}) and most massive terrestrial animals known (''[[Argentinosaurus]]'' reached 80–100&nbsp;[[metric ton]]nes, or 90–110&nbsp;[[short ton|ton]]s), as well as [[Theropoda|theropod]]s, the largest terrestrial carnivores (''[[Spinosaurus]]'', the longest, grew to 15 meters; the more famous ''[[Tyrannosaurus]]'', to 8.4 tonnes in weight).
***Order [[Pterosauria]]
****The largest [[azhdarchid]] [[pterosaur]]s, such as ''[[Hatzegopteryx]]'' and ''[[Quetzalcoatlus]]'', attained wingspans around {{cvt|11-12|m}} and weights probably in the {{cvt|70-250|kg}} range. The former is thought to have been the apex predator of its [[Hațeg Island|island ecosystem]].
***Order [[Crocodilia]]
****[[Alligators]] and [[crocodiles]] are large semiaquatic reptiles and are among the largest extant predators, the largest of which, the [[Saltwater crocodile]] (''Crocodylus porosus''), reaches {{convert|6|m|ft|abbr=on}} and can weigh up to {{convert|1360|kg|lb|-2|abbr=on}}, possibly up to {{convert|7|m|ft|abbr=on}} in length and {{convert|2000|kg|lb|abbr=on}} in weight. Several other larger species of [[crocodile]] such as [[Nile crocodile]], [[Orinoco crocodile]] and [[American crocodile]] may reach or exceed sizes of {{convert|6|m|ft|abbr=on}} and weigh up to {{convert|1000|kg|lb|abbr=on}} or more. In the family [[Alligatoridae]], the largest members are the [[Black caiman]] and the [[American alligator]], both of which can reach at least {{convert|5|m|ft|abbr=on}}, weighing up to {{convert|500|kg|lb|abbr=on}}, with unverified reports of sizes approaching {{convert|6|m|ft|abbr=on}} and weights of over {{convert|1000|kg|lb|abbr=on}}. Crocodilians' distant ancestors and their kin, the [[Pseudosuchia#Evolution|pseudosuchians]] (traditional [[crurotarsan]]s), dominated the world in the late [[Triassic]], until the [[Triassic–Jurassic extinction event]] allowed dinosaurs to overtake them. They remained diverse during the later [[Mesozoic]], when [[Crocodyliformes|crocodyliforms]] such as ''[[Deinosuchus]]'' and ''[[Sarcosuchus]]'' reached lengths of 12 m. Similarly large crocodilians, such as ''[[Mourasuchus]]'' and ''[[Purussaurus]]'', were present as recently as the [[Miocene]] in South America.
***Order [[Squamata]]
****While the largest extant [[lizard]], the [[Komodo dragon]] (''Varanus komodoensis''), another island giant, can reach {{convert|3|m|ft|0|abbr=on}} in length, its extinct Australian relative ''[[Megalania]]'' may have reached more than twice that size. These [[monitor lizard]]s' marine relatives, the [[mosasaur]]s, were [[apex predator]]s in late Cretaceous seas.
****The heaviest extant [[snake]] is considered to be the [[Eunectes murinus|green anaconda]] (''Eunectes murinus''), while the [[Python reticulatus|reticulated python]] (''Python reticulatus''), at up to 8.7 m or more, is considered the longest. An extinct Australian [[Pliocene]] species of ''[[Liasis]]'', the [[Bluff Downs giant python]], reached 10 m, while the [[Paleocene]] ''[[Titanoboa]]'' of South America reached lengths of 12–15 m and an estimated weight of about {{convert|1135|kg|lb|abbr=off|sigfig=2}}.
***Order [[Testudines]]
****The largest turtle is the [[critically endangered]] marine [[leatherback turtle]] (''Dermochelys coriacea''), weighing up to {{convert|900|kg|lb|-2|abbr=on}}. It is distinguished from other [[sea turtle]]s by its lack of a [[bone|bony]] [[exoskeleton|shell]]. The most massive terrestrial chelonians are the [[giant tortoise]]s of the [[Galápagos Islands]] (''[[Chelonoidis niger]]'') and [[Aldabra|Aldabra Atoll]] (''[[Aldabrachelys gigantea]]''), at up to {{convert|300|kg|lb|-1|abbr=on}}. These tortoises are the biggest survivors of an assortment of giant tortoise species that were widely present on continental landmasses<ref name="Hansen">{{Cite journal
|last=Hansen
|first=D. M.
|author2=Donlan, C. J.
|author3=Griffiths, C. J.
|author4=Campbell, K. J.
|title=Ecological history and latent conservation potential: large and giant tortoises as a model for taxon substitutions
|journal=[[Ecography (journal)|Ecography]]
|volume=33
|issue=2
|pages=272–284
|date=April 2010
|url=http://www.advancedconservation.org/library/hansen_etal_2010.pdf
|doi=10.1111/j.1600-0587.2010.06305.x
|access-date=2011-02-26
|url-status=dead
|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110724224354/http://www.advancedconservation.org/library/hansen_etal_2010.pdf
|archive-date=July 24, 2011
}}</ref><ref name="Cione">{{Cite journal
|last=Cione
|first=A. L.
|author2=Tonni, E. P.
|author3=Soibelzon, L.
|title=The Broken Zig-Zag: Late Cenozoic large mammal and tortoise extinction in South America
|journal=Rev. Mus. Argentino Cienc. Nat. |series=Nueva Serie
|volume=5
|issue=1
|pages=1–19
|year=2003
|issn=1514-5158
|doi= 10.22179/REVMACN.5.26
|doi-access=free
}}</ref> and additional islands<ref name = "Hansen"/> during the Pleistocene.
*Class [[Amphibia]] (in the wide, probably paraphyletic, sense)
**Order [[Temnospondyli]] (relationship to [[Lissamphibia|extant amphibians]] is unclear)
***The Permian temnospondyl ''[[Prionosuchus]]'', the largest amphibian known, reached 9 m in length and was an aquatic predator resembling a crocodilian. After the appearance of real crocodilians, temnospondyls such as ''[[Koolasuchus]]'' (5 m long) had retreated to the Antarctic region by the Cretaceous, before going extinct.
*Class [[Actinopterygii]]
**Order [[Tetraodontiformes]]
***The largest extant [[bony fish]] is the [[ocean sunfish]] (''Mola mola''), whose average adult weight is {{convert|1000|kg|lb|-2|abbr=on}}. While phylogenetically a "bony fish", its skeleton is primarily [[cartilage]] (which is lighter than [[bone]]). It has a disk-shaped body, and propels itself with its long, thin [[dorsal fin|dorsal]] and [[anal fin]]s; it feeds primarily on [[jellyfish]]. In these three respects (as well as in its size and diving habits), it resembles a leatherback turtle.
**Order [[Lampriformes]]
***The [[giant oarfish]] (''Regalecus glesne'') is the longest bony fish, reaching {{convert|11|m|ft|abbr=on}}.
**Order [[Acipenseriformes]]
***The [[critically endangered species|critically endangered]] [[Beluga (sturgeon)|beluga]] (European sturgeon, ''Huso huso'') at up to {{convert|1476|kg|lb|abbr=on}} is the largest [[sturgeon]] (which are also mostly cartilaginous) and is considered the largest [[anadromous]] fish.
**Order [[Siluriformes]]
***The [[critically endangered species|critically endangered]] [[Mekong giant catfish]] (''Pangasianodon gigas''), at up to {{convert|293|kg|lb|abbr=on}}, is often viewed as the largest [[freshwater fish]].
*Class [[Chondrichthyes]]
**Order [[Lamniformes]]
***The largest living predatory fish, the [[great white shark]] (''Carcharodon carcharias''), reaches weights up to {{convert|2240|kg|lb|-1|abbr=on}}. Its extinct relative ''[[megalodon|C. megalodon]]'' (the disputed genus being either ''Carcharodon'' or ''Carcharocles'') was more than an [[order of magnitude]] larger, and is the largest predatory shark or fish of all time (and one of the largest predators in vertebrate history); it preyed on whales and other [[marine mammal]]s.
**Order [[Orectolobiformes]]
***The largest extant [[shark]], [[Chondrichthyes|cartilaginous fish]], and [[fish]] overall is the [[whale shark]] (''Rhincodon typus''), which reaches weights in excess of {{convert|21.5|t|lb|abbr=off}}. Like baleen whales, it is a [[filter feeder]] and primarily consumes [[plankton]].
**Order [[Rajiformes]]
***The [[manta ray]] (''Manta birostris'') is another filter feeder and the largest [[Batoidea|ray]], growing to up to 2300&nbsp;kg.
*Class [[Placodermi]]
**Order [[Arthrodira]]
***The largest armored fish, ''[[Dunkleosteus]]'', arose during the late Devonian. At up to {{convert|10|m|ft}} in length<ref name="Palmer2002">{{cite book|author=Palmer, D.|title=The Marshall Illustrated Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs and Prehistoric Animals|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Xp2cAAAACAAJ|access-date= 2013-06-10|date=1 July 2002|publisher=New Line Books|isbn= 978-1-57717-293-2|oclc= 183092423}}</ref> and {{convert|3.6|t|ST|lk=on}} in mass,<ref>[http://www.smh.com.au/news/science/jaws-of-steel-on-this-fish-tank/2006/11/29/1164777657728.html Monster fish crushed opposition with strongest bite ever]. The Sydney Morning Herald. November 30, 2006.</ref> it was a [[hypercarnivore|hypercarnivorous]] [[apex predator]] that employed [[Aquatic predation#Suction feeding|suction feeding]].<ref name="AndersonWestneat2007">{{cite journal|last1=Anderson|first1=P. S.L|last2=Westneat|first2=M. W|title=Feeding mechanics and bite force modelling of the skull of ''Dunkleosteus terrelli'', an ancient apex predator|journal=Biology Letters|volume=3|issue=1|date=2006-11-28|pages=77–80|issn=1744-9561|doi=10.1098/rsbl.2006.0569|pmid=17443970|pmc=2373817}}</ref><ref name="Anderson2010">{{cite journal|last1=Anderson|first1=P.S.L.|title=Using linkage models to explore skull kinematic diversity and functional convergence in arthrodire placoderms|journal=Journal of Morphology|volume=271|issue=8|date=2010-05-04|pages=990–1005|issn=0362-2525|doi=10.1002/jmor.10850|pmid=20623651|s2cid=46604512}}</ref> Its contemporary, ''[[Titanichthys]]'', apparently an early filter feeder, rivaled it in size. The arthrodires were eliminated by the environmental upheavals of the [[Late Devonian extinction]], after existing for only about 50 million years.
*Class [[Cephalopoda]]
**Order [[Ammonitida]]
***The Late Cretaceous [[ammonite]] ''[[Parapuzosia seppenradensis]]'' reached a shell diameter of over 2 m.
**Order [[Teuthida]]
***A number of deep ocean creatures exhibit [[Deep-sea gigantism|abyssal gigantism]]. These include the [[giant squid]] (''Architeuthis'') and [[colossal squid]] (''Mesonychoteuthis hamiltoni''); both (although rarely seen) are believed to attain lengths of {{convert|12|m|ft|0|abbr=on}} or more. The latter is the world's largest [[invertebrate]], and has the largest [[eye]]s of any animal. Both are preyed upon by sperm whales.
*Stem-group [[Arthropoda]]
**Order [[Radiodonta]]
***[[Anomalocarid]]s were a group of very early legless marine arthropods that included the largest predators of the [[Cambrian]], such as ''[[Anomalocaris]]''. By the early [[Ordovician]] they had evolved into giant (for the time) filter feeders, apparently in response to the proliferation of plankton during the [[Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event]]. ''[[Aegirocassis]]'' grew to over 2 m in length.<ref name="Van_Roy2015">{{cite journal|title=Anomalocaridid trunk limb homology revealed by a giant filter-feeder with paired flaps|author1=Van Roy, P. |author2=Daley, A. C. |author3=Briggs, D. E. G. | journal=Nature|date=11 March 2015 |doi=10.1038/nature14256|volume=522 |issue=7554 |pages=77–80 |pmid=25762145|bibcode=2015Natur.522...77V|s2cid=205242881 }}</ref>
**Order [[Eurypterida]]
***Eurypterids (sea scorpions) were a diverse group of aquatic and possibly amphibious predators that included the most massive [[arthropod]]s to have existed. They survived over 200 million years, but finally died out in the [[Permian–Triassic extinction event]] along with [[trilobite]]s and most other forms of life present at the time, including most of the dominant terrestrial therapsids. The Early [[Devonian]]'' [[Jaekelopterus]]'' reached an estimated length of {{convert|2.5|m|ft|abbr=on}}, not including its [[raptorial]] [[chelicerae]], and is thought to have been a freshwater species.

==Gallery==


=== Other extinct Cenozoic megafauna ===
===Extinct===
<gallery>
<gallery>
File:Dromornis stirtoni.jpg|''[[Dromornis stirtoni]]''
File:Eurypterus Paleoart.jpg|Some [[Paleozoic]] [[Eurypterid|sea scorpions]] (''[[Eurypterus]]'' shown) were larger than a human.
File:Indricotherium11.jpg|alt=Asian indricothere rhino Paraceratherium was among the largest land mammals, about twice a bush elephant's mass.|Asian [[Paraceratheriidae|paraceratheriid]] rhino ''[[Paraceratherium]]'' was among the largest land mammals,<ref name="Tsubamoto2012">{{cite journal | doi = 10.4202/app.2011.0067 | title=Estimating body mass from the astragalus in mammals | journal=Acta Palaeontologica Polonica | date=2012 | pages= 259–265| first=T. | last=Tsubamoto| s2cid=54686160 }}</ref>
File:Dunkleosteus BW.jpg|''[[Dunkleosteus]]'' was a {{convert|10|m|ft|0|abbr=on}} long toothless [[Armour (anatomy)|armored]] predatory Devonian [[Placodermi|placoderm]] [[Prehistoric fish|fish]].
File:Megalodon jaws on display at the National Baltimore Aquarium.jpg|Reconstructed jaws of [[megalodon]] (''Otodus megalodon'')
File:Dimetr eryopsDB.jpg|Sail-backed [[pelycosaur]] ''[[Dimetrodon]]'' and [[Temnospondyli|temnospondyl]] ''[[Eryops]]'' from North America's [[Permian]].
File:Deinotherium12.jpg|''[[Deinotherium]]''
File:Leedsichtys092.jpg|''[[Leedsichthys]]'', a mid-[[Jurassic]] [[filter feeder]] fish, may have reached sizes of {{convert|7|-|16.5|m|ft|abbr=on}}.
File:Kelenken.jpg|''[[Kelenken guillermoi]]''
File:Macronaria scrubbed enh.jpg|[[Macronaria]]n [[Sauropoda|sauropods]]; from left, ''[[Camarasaurus]]'', ''[[Brachiosaurus]]'', ''[[Giraffatitan]]'', ''[[Euhelopus]]''.
File:Gastornis.png|''[[Gastornis |Gastornis gigantea]]''
File:Spinosaurus life restoration with Onchopristis.jpg|thumb|left|The ''[[Spinosaurus]]'' (left) was the largest terrestrial predator to ever live, at 12.6 to 18 meters (41 to 59 ft).
File:Sues skeleton.jpg|''[[Tyrannosaurus]]'' was a {{convert|12.3|m|ft|abbr=on}} long [[theropod]] dinosaur, an [[apex predator]] of [[Laramidia|west North America]].
File:Indricotherium11.jpg|Asian [[Indricotheriinae|indricothere]] [[rhino]] ''[[Paraceratherium]]'' was among the largest land mammals,<ref name = "Tsubamoto2012">{{cite journal | doi = 10.4202/app.2011.0067 | title=Estimating body mass from the astragalus in mammals | journal=Acta Palaeontologica Polonica | date=2012 | pages= 259–265| first=T. | last=Tsubamoto| s2cid=54686160 }}</ref> about twice a bush elephant's mass.
File:Argentavis magnificens.JPG|The [[Late Miocene]] [[Teratornithidae|teratorn]] ''[[Argentavis]]'' of South America had a {{convert|7|m|ft|0|abbr=on}} wingspan.
File:Megalodon jaws on display at the National Baltimore Aquarium.jpg|Reconstructed jaws of ''[[Megalodon|C. megalodon]]'' ([[National Aquarium (Baltimore)|Baltimore]]).
File:Deinotherium12.jpg|''[[Deinotherium]]'' had downward-curving tusks and ranged widely over [[Afro-Eurasia]].
File:Life reconstruction of the terror bird Titanis walleri.jpg|''[[Titanis|Titanis walleri]]'', the only [[Phorusrhacidae|terror bird]] known to have [[Great American Interchange|invaded]] North America, was {{convert|2.5|m|ft|abbr=on}} tall.
File:Diprotodon optatum (2).jpg|Hippo-sized ''[[Diprotodon]]'' of Australia, the largest [[marsupial]] of all time, became extinct 40,000 years ago.
File:Varanus priscus Melbourne Museum.jpg|''[[Megalania]]'', a giant carnivorous [[goanna]] of Australia, might have grown to 7 metres long.
<!-- alternate xenarthran image (we don't need two)- File:Megatherum DB.jpg|Elephant-sized ''[[Megatherium]]'', from South America's [[Pleistocene]], was the largest [[ground sloth|sloth]].<ref name = "Fariña2013" /> -->
File:Glyptodon (Riha2000).jpg|''[[Glyptodon]]'', from South America's [[Pleistocene]], was an auto-sized [[Cingulata|cingulate]], a relative of [[armadillo]]s.
<!-- alternate South American ungulate image (we don't need two)- File:Toxodon skeleton in BA.JPG|''[[Toxodon]]'', one of South America's largest and last [[Notoungulata|notoungulate]]s.<ref name = "Fariña2013" /> It had a [[Mixotoxodon|relative]] in Mexico. -->
File:Macrauchenia (reconstruction).jpg|''[[Macrauchenia]]'', South America's last and largest [[litoptern]], may have had a short [[saiga]]-like trunk or [[moose]]-like nostrils.<ref name=EoDP>{{cite book |editor=Palmer, D.|year=1999 |title= The Marshall Illustrated Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs and Prehistoric Animals|publisher= Marshall Editions|location=London|page= 248|isbn= 978-1-84028-152-1}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Moyano|first1=S.R.|last2=Giannini|first2=N.P.|title=Cranial characters associated with the proboscis postnatal-development in Tapirus (Perissodactyla: Tapiridae) and comparisons with other extant and fossil hoofed mammals|journal= Zoologischer Anzeiger|date=2018-10-10|issn=0044-5231|doi=10.1016/j.jcz.2018.08.005|volume=277|issue=7554|pages=143–147|s2cid=92143497}}</ref>
File:Panthera leo atrox Sergiodlarosa.jpg|[[American lion]]s exceeded [[Extant taxon|extant]] [[lion]]s in size and ranged over much of N. America until 11,000 [[Before Present|BP]].
File:Woolly mammoth (Mammuthus primigenius) - Mauricio Antón.jpg|[[Woolly mammoth]]s vanished after humans invaded their habitat in Eurasia and N. America.<ref name="Stuart" />
File:Archaeoindris fontoynonti.jpg|The [[subfossil lemur]] ''[[Archaeoindris]]'' was the largest [[lemur]] ever to exist, close in size to a [[gorilla]].
File:Giant Haasts eagle attacking New Zealand moa.jpg|[[Haast's eagle]], the largest eagle known, attacking [[moa]] (a [[genus]] which included the [[Dinornis|tallest bird]] known).
</gallery>
</gallery>


===Extant===
===Extant===
<gallery>
<gallery>
File:Nandu Rhea americana Tierpark Hellabrunn-1.jpg|The [[greater rhea]]
Image:Kbnpsilverbackandchild 0.5.jpg|The [[eastern gorilla]] is the largest and one of the more [[IUCN Red List critically endangered species (Animalia)#Hominidae|endangered primates]] on the planet.
File:Kbnpsilverbackandchild 0.5.jpg|The [[eastern gorilla]]
Image:Hunting Tiger Ranthambore.jpg|The most common [[Tiger#Subspecies|tiger subspecies]], [[Bengal tiger]]s are [[endangered]] by [[poaching]] and [[habitat destruction]].
File:Hunting Tiger Ranthambore.jpg|[[Bengal tiger]]s
Image:Polar Bear 2004-11-15.jpg|[[Polar bear]]s, among the largest [[bear]]s (consistent with [[Bergmann's rule]]), are [[Polar bear#Climate change|vulnerable]] to [[global warming]].
File:Polar Bear 2004-11-15.jpg|[[Polar bear]]s
Image:Ngorongoro Spitzmaulnashorn edit1crop.jpg|The [[critically endangered]] [[black rhinoceros]], up to {{convert|3.75|m|ft}} long, is [[Black rhinoceros#Distribution|threatened]] by poaching.
File:Ngorongoro Spitzmaulnashorn edit1crop.jpg|The [[black rhinoceros]]
Image:Temee.jpg|[[Wild Bactrian camel]]s are critically endangered. Their ancestors [[Camelid#Evolution|originated in North America]].
Image:Ovibos moschatus qtl3.jpg|Unlike woolly [[woolly rhinoceros|rhinos]] and [[woolly mammoth|mammoths]], [[muskox]]en narrowly survived the [[Quaternary extinction event|Quaternary extinctions]].<ref name = "Stuart"/>
File:Ovibos moschatus qtl3.jpg|Unlike woolly [[woolly rhinoceros|rhinos]] and [[woolly mammoth|mammoths]], [[muskox]]en narrowly survived the [[Quaternary extinction event|Quaternary extinctions]].<ref name = "Stuart">{{Cite journal | last = Stuart | first = A. J. | title = Mammalian extinctions in the Late Pleistocene of northern Eurasia and North America | journal = [[Biological Reviews]] | volume = 66 | issue = 4 | pages = 453–562 | date = November 1991 | doi = 10.1111/j.1469-185X.1991.tb01149.x | pmid=1801948| s2cid = 41295526 }}</ref>
File:Nijlpaard.jpg|[[Hippopotamus]]es
Image:Nijlpaard.jpg|[[Hippopotamus]]es, the heaviest and most aquatic [[even-toed ungulate]]s, are [[cetacea|whales]]' [[Cetartiodactyla#Kin to hippos|closest living relatives]].
File:Mother and baby sperm whale.jpg|The [[sperm whale]]
<!-- alternate large whale image (we don't need two)- Image:Anim1754 - Flickr - NOAA Photo Library.jpg|A [[filter feeder]] up to {{convert|33|m|ft|abbr=on}} long, the [[blue whale]] is the [[largest organism|largest animal]] of all time. -->
File:Killerwhales jumping.jpg|The [[orca]]
Image:Mother and baby sperm whale.jpg|The [[sperm whale]], the largest [[toothed whale]] and toothed [[predator]], has the [[biggest brain]].
File:Southern Cassowary 7071.jpg|The [[southern cassowary]]
Image:Killerwhales jumping.jpg|The [[orca]], the largest [[dolphin]] and [[Pack hunter|pack predator]], is [[Killer whale#Intelligence|highly intelligent]] and lives in [[Killer whale#Social structure|complex societies]].
File:Ostrich Struthio camelus Tanzania 3742 cropped Nevit.jpg|The [[common ostrich]]
Image:Helmkasuar3.jpg|The [[cassowary]], the heaviest non-African bird, can run at 50&nbsp;km/h through dense [[rainforest]].
File:SaltwaterCrocodile('Maximo').jpg|The [[saltwater crocodile]]
<!-- alternate ratite image (we don't need two)- Image:Struthio camelus in Serengeti crop.jpg|The [[ostrich]] is the largest [[ratite]], the heaviest living [[bird]] and, at 70&nbsp;km/h,<ref name="Davies">{{Cite encyclopedia|last=Davies|first=S.J.J.F.|editor=Hutchins, Michael|encyclopedia=Grzimek's Animal Life Encyclopedia|title= Birds I Tinamous and Ratites to Hoatzins|edition=2|year=2003|publisher=Gale Group|volume=8|location=Farmington Hills, MI|isbn=0-7876-5784-0|pages=99–101}}</ref> the fastest running [[biped]].<ref name = "Stewart2006">{{cite web|last = Stewart|first = D.|title = A Bird Like No Other|work = [[National Wildlife]]|publisher = [[National Wildlife Federation]]|date = 2006-08-01|access-date = 2014-05-30|url = http://www.nwf.org/News-and-Magazines/National-Wildlife/Birds/Archives/2006/A-Bird-Like-No-Other.aspx|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20120209033650/http://www.nwf.org/News-and-Magazines/National-Wildlife/Birds/Archives/2006/A-Bird-Like-No-Other.aspx|archive-date = 2012-02-09}}</ref>{{refn|The [[red kangaroo]] can attain a similar speed for short distances.<ref name="secret">{{cite book|last = Penny|first = M.|title = The Secret World of Kangaroos|publisher=Raintree Steck-Vaughn|year = 2002|location = Austin TX|isbn = 0-7398-4986-7|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=NNLpLfdP5GwC&focus=searchwithinvolume&q=%2270+km%22}}</ref>|group = note}} -->
File:Komodo dragon Varanus komodoensis Ragunan Zoo 2.JPG|The [[Komodo dragon]]
Image:SaltwaterCrocodile('Maximo').jpg|The [[saltwater crocodile]] is the largest living [[reptile]] and a dangerous [[Crocodile attack|predator of humans]].
File:Anaconda Loreto Peru.jpg|The [[Eunectes murinus|green anaconda]]
Image:Komodo dragon Varanus komodoensis Ragunan Zoo 2.JPG|The [[Komodo dragon]], an [[Island gigantism|insular giant]] and the largest [[lizard]], has [[serrated]] teeth and a [[Komodo dragon#Venom|venomous bite]].
File:Velemlok čínský zoo praha 1.jpg|The [[Chinese giant salamander]]
Image:Anaconda Loreto Peru.jpg|The [[Eunectes murinus|green anaconda]], an aquatic [[Constriction|constrictor]], is the heaviest [[snake]], weighing up to {{convert|97.5|kg|lb|abbr=on}} or more.
File:Mola alexandrini (Bump-head Mola).jpg|The [[giant sunfish]]
Image:Sunfish2.jpg|The [[ocean sunfish#Range and behavior|deep-diving]] [[ocean sunfish]] is the largest [[Osteichthyes|bony fish]], but its skeleton is mostly [[Cartilage|cartilaginous]].
File:Lates niloticus 2.jpg|The [[Nile perch]]
Image:Lates niloticus 2.jpg|The [[Nile perch]], one of the largest freshwater fish, is also a damaging [[invasive species]].{{refn|[[Forced perspective|Perspective]] makes the fish appear larger relative to the man standing behind it (another example of a megafaunal species) than it actually is.|group = note}}
Image:White shark.jpg|The [[great white shark|great white]], the largest macropredatory fish, is more endangered than the [[tiger]].<ref>{{cite news|title=Great white shark is more endangered than tiger, claims scientist|author=Sample, Ian|url=https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2010/feb/19/great-white-shark-endangered-tiger|newspaper=The Guardian|date=19 February 2010|access-date=14 August 2013}}</ref>
File:White shark.jpg|alt=The great white, the largest macropredatory fish, is more endangered than the tiger.|The [[great white shark]], the largest macropredatory fish and one of the largest carnivorous shark species, is found worldwide.<ref>{{cite news|title=Great white shark is more endangered than tiger, claims scientist|author=Sample, Ian|url=https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2010/feb/19/great-white-shark-endangered-tiger|newspaper=The Guardian|date=19 February 2010|access-date=14 August 2013|archive-date=9 September 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130909112607/http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2010/feb/19/great-white-shark-endangered-tiger|url-status=live}}</ref>
File:Manta alfredi fushivaru thila.jpg|The [[manta ray|manta]]
<!-- alternate shark image (we don't need two)- Image:Male whale shark at Georgia Aquarium crop.jpg|The [[whale shark]] is the largest extant shark or fish species, growing up to {{convert|12.6|m|ft|abbr=on}} in length. -->
File:Giant squid Ranheim2.jpg|Examination of a 9 m [[giant squid]]
Image:Manta alfredi fushivaru thila.jpg|The [[manta ray|manta]], a filter feeder, is the largest [[Batoidea|ray]] at up to 7.6 m across, yet can [[Whale surfacing behaviour#Breaching and lunging|breach]] clear of the water.
Image:Giant squid Ranheim2.jpg|Examination of a 9 m [[giant squid]], an [[Deep-sea gigantism|abyssal giant]] and the second largest [[cephalopod]].
</gallery>
</gallery>


Line 532: Line 335:
*[[Cope's rule]]
*[[Cope's rule]]
*[[Deep-sea gigantism]]
*[[Deep-sea gigantism]]
*[[Fauna]]
*[[Island dwarfism]]
*[[Island gigantism]]
*[[Island gigantism]]
*[[Largest organisms]]
*[[Largest organisms]]
*[[Largest prehistoric organisms]]
*[[Largest prehistoric animals]]
*[[List of heaviest land mammals]]
*[[List of heaviest land mammals]]
*[[List of largest mammals]]
*[[List of largest mammals]]
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*[[Megaflora]]
*[[Megaflora]]
*[[Megaherb]]
*[[Megaherb]]
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*[[Pleistocene megafauna]]
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* [https://web.archive.org/web/20141225044106/http://megafauna.com/table-of-contents/ Megafauna – "First Victims of the Human-Caused Extinction"]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20141225044106/http://megafauna.com/table-of-contents/ Megafauna – "First Victims of the Human-Caused Extinction"]


[[Category:Megafauna| ]]
[[Category:Extinction]]
[[Category:Extinction]]
[[Category:Zoology]]
[[Category:Zoology]]

Latest revision as of 21:15, 16 December 2024

The African bush elephant (foreground), Earth's largest extant land animal, and the Masai ostrich (background), one of Earth's largest extant birds

In zoology, megafauna (from Greek μέγας megas "large" and Neo-Latin fauna "animal life") are large animals. The precise definition of the term varies widely, though a common threshold is approximately 45 kilograms (99 lb), with other thresholds as low as 10 kilograms (22 lb) or as high as 1,000 kilograms (2,200 lb). Large body size is generally associated with other traits, such as having a slow rate of reproduction and, in large herbivores, reduced or negligible adult mortality from being killed by predators.

Megafauna species have considerable effects on their local environment, including the suppression of the growth of woody vegetation and a consequent reduction in wildfire frequency. Megafauna also play a role in regulating and stabilizing the abundance of smaller animals.

During the Pleistocene, megafauna were diverse across the globe, with most continental ecosystems exhibiting similar or greater species richness in megafauna as compared to ecosystems in Africa today. During the Late Pleistocene, particularly from around 50,000 years ago onwards, most large mammal species became extinct, including 80% of all mammals greater than 1,000 kilograms (2,200 lb), while small animals were largely unaffected. This pronouncedly size-biased extinction is otherwise unprecedented in the geological record. Humans and climatic change have been implicated by most authors as the likely causes, though the relative importance of either factor has been the subject of significant controversy.

History

[edit]

One of the earliest occurrences of the term "megafauna" is Alfred Russel Wallace's 1876 work The geographical distribution of animals. He described the animals as "the hugest, and fiercest, and strangest forms". In the 20th and 21st centuries, the term usually refers to large animals. There are variations in thresholds used to define megafauna as a whole or certain groups of megafauna. Many scientific literature adopt Paul S. Martin's proposed threshold of 45 kilograms (99 lb) to classify animals as megafauna. However, for freshwater species, 30 kilograms (66 lb) is the preferred threshold. Some scientists define herbivorous terrestrial megafauna as having a weight exceeding 100 kilograms (220 lb), and terrestrial carnivorous megafauna as more than 15 kilograms (33 lb). Additionally, Owen-Smith coined the term megaherbivore to describe herbivores that weighed over 1,000 kilograms (2,200 lb), which has seen some use by other researchers.[1]

Among living animals, the term megafauna is most commonly used for the largest extant terrestrial mammals, which includes (but is not limited to) elephants, giraffes, hippopotamuses, rhinoceroses, and larger bovines. Of these five categories of large herbivores, only bovines are presently found outside of Africa and Asia, but all the others were formerly more wide-ranging, with their ranges and populations continually shrinking and decreasing over time. Wild equines are another example of megafauna, but their current ranges are largely restricted to the Old World, specifically in Africa and Asia. Megafaunal species may be categorized according to their dietary type: megaherbivores (e.g., elephants), megacarnivores (e.g., lions), and megaomnivores (e.g., bears).[2][3]

Ecological strategy

[edit]

Megafauna animals – in the sense of the largest mammals and birds – are generally K-strategists, with high longevity, slow population growth rates, low mortality rates, and (at least for the largest) few or no natural predators capable of killing adults.[4][1] These characteristics, although not exclusive to such megafauna, make them vulnerable to human overexploitation, in part because of their slow population recovery rates.[5][6]

Evolution of large body size

[edit]

One observation that has been made about the evolution of larger body size is that rapid rates of increase that are often seen over relatively short time intervals are not sustainable over much longer time periods. In an examination of mammal body mass changes over time, the maximum increase possible in a given time interval was found to scale with the interval length raised to the 0.25 power.[7] This is thought to reflect the emergence, during a trend of increasing maximum body size, of a series of anatomical, physiological, environmental, genetic and other constraints that must be overcome by evolutionary innovations before further size increases are possible. A strikingly faster rate of change was found for large decreases in body mass, such as may be associated with the phenomenon of insular dwarfism. When normalized to generation length, the maximum rate of body mass decrease was found to be over 30 times greater than the maximum rate of body mass increase for a ten-fold change.[7]

In terrestrial mammals

[edit]
Large terrestrial mammals compared in size to one of the largest sauropod dinosaurs, Patagotitan

Subsequent to the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event that eliminated the non-avian dinosaurs about 66 Ma (million years) ago, terrestrial mammals underwent a nearly exponential increase in body size as they diversified to occupy the ecological niches left vacant.[8] Starting from just a few kg before the event, maximum size had reached ~50 kilograms (110 lb) a few million years later, and ~750 kilograms (1,650 lb) by the end of the Paleocene. This trend of increasing body mass appears to level off about 40 Ma ago (in the late Eocene), suggesting that physiological or ecological constraints had been reached, after an increase in body mass of over three orders of magnitude.[8] However, when considered from the standpoint of rate of size increase per generation, the exponential increase is found to have continued until the appearance of Indricotherium 30 Ma ago. (Since generation time scales with body mass0.259, increasing generation times with increasing size cause the log mass vs. time plot to curve downward from a linear fit.)[7]

Megaherbivores eventually attained a body mass of over 10,000 kilograms (22,000 lb). The largest of these, indricotheres and proboscids, have been hindgut fermenters, which are believed to have an advantage over foregut fermenters in terms of being able to accelerate gastrointestinal transit in order to accommodate very large food intakes.[9] A similar trend emerges when rates of increase of maximum body mass per generation for different mammalian clades are compared (using rates averaged over macroevolutionary time scales). Among terrestrial mammals, the fastest rates of increase of body mass0.259 vs. time (in Ma) occurred in perissodactyls (a slope of 2.1), followed by rodents (1.2) and proboscids (1.1),[7] all of which are hindgut fermenters. The rate of increase for artiodactyls (0.74) was about a third of the perissodactyls. The rate for carnivorans (0.65) was slightly lower yet, while primates, perhaps constrained by their arboreal habits, had the lowest rate (0.39) among the mammalian groups studied.[7]

Terrestrial mammalian carnivores from several eutherian groups (the artiodactyl Andrewsarchus – formerly considered a mesonychid, the oxyaenid Sarkastodon, and the carnivorans Amphicyon and Arctodus) all reached a maximum size of about 1,000 kilograms (2,200 lb)[8] (the carnivoran Arctotherium and the hyaenodontid Simbakubwa may have been somewhat larger). The largest known metatherian carnivore, Proborhyaena gigantea, apparently reached 600 kilograms (1,300 lb), also close to this limit.[10] A similar theoretical maximum size for mammalian carnivores has been predicted based on the metabolic rate of mammals, the energetic cost of obtaining prey, and the maximum estimated rate coefficient of prey intake.[11] It has also been suggested that maximum size for mammalian carnivores is constrained by the stress the humerus can withstand at top running speed.[10]

Analysis of the variation of maximum body size over the last 40 Ma suggests that decreasing temperature and increasing continental land area are associated with increasing maximum body size. The former correlation would be consistent with Bergmann's rule,[12] and might be related to the thermoregulatory advantage of large body mass in cool climates,[8] better ability of larger organisms to cope with seasonality in food supply,[12] or other factors;[12] the latter correlation could be explained in terms of range and resource limitations.[8] However, the two parameters are interrelated (due to sea level drops accompanying increased glaciation), making the driver of the trends in maximum size more difficult to identify.[8]

In marine mammals

[edit]
Baleen whale comparative sizes

Since tetrapods (first reptiles, later mammals) returned to the sea in the Late Permian, they have dominated the top end of the marine body size range, due to the more efficient intake of oxygen possible using lungs.[13][14] The ancestors of cetaceans are believed to have been the semiaquatic pakicetids, no larger than dogs, of about 53 million years (Ma) ago.[15] By 40 Ma ago, cetaceans had attained a length of 20 m (66 ft) or more in Basilosaurus, an elongated, serpentine whale that differed from modern whales in many respects and was not ancestral to them. Following this, the evolution of large body size in cetaceans appears to have come to a temporary halt and then to have backtracked, although the available fossil records are limited. However, in the period from 31 Ma ago (in the Oligocene) to the present, cetaceans underwent a significantly more rapid sustained increase in body mass (a rate of increase in body mass0.259 of a factor of 3.2 per million years) than achieved by any group of terrestrial mammals.[7] This trend led to the largest animal of all time, the modern blue whale. Several reasons for the more rapid evolution of large body size in cetaceans are possible. Fewer biomechanical constraints on increases in body size may be associated with suspension in water as opposed to standing against the force of gravity, and with swimming movements as opposed to terrestrial locomotion. Also, the greater heat capacity and thermal conductivity of water compared to air may increase the thermoregulatory advantage of large body size in marine endotherms, although diminishing returns apply.[7]

Among the toothed whales, maximum body size appears to be limited by food availability. Larger size, as in sperm and beaked whales, facilitates deeper diving to access relatively easily-caught, large cephalopod prey in a less competitive environment. Compared to odontocetes, the efficiency of baleen whales' filter feeding scales more favorably with increasing size when planktonic food is dense, making larger sizes more advantageous. The lunge feeding technique of rorquals appears to be more energy efficient than the ram feeding of balaenid whales; the latter technique is used with less dense and patchy plankton.[16] The cooling trend in Earth's recent history may have generated more localities of high plankton abundance via wind-driven upwellings, facilitating the evolution of gigantic whales.[16]

Cetaceans are not the only marine mammals to reach tremendous sizes.[17] The largest mammal carnivorans of all time are marine pinnipeds, the largest of which is the southern elephant seal, which can reach more than 6 m (20 ft) in length and weigh up to 5,000 kg (11,000 lb). Other large pinnipeds include the northern elephant seal at 4,000 kg (8,800 lb), walrus at 2,000 kg (4,400 lb), and Steller sea lion at 1,135 kg (2,502 lb).[18][19] The sirenians are another group of marine mammals which adapted to fully aquatic life around the same time as the cetaceans did. Sirenians are closely related to elephants. The largest sirenian was the Steller's sea cow, which reached up to 10 m (33 ft) in length and weighed 8,000 to 10,000 kg (18,000 to 22,000 lb), and was hunted to extinction in the 18th century.[20]

In flightless birds

[edit]
A size comparison between a human and 4 moa species:
1. Dinornis novaezealandiae
2. Emeus crassus
3. Anomalopteryx didiformis
4. Dinornis robustus

Because of the small initial size of all mammals following the extinction of the non-avian dinosaurs, nonmammalian vertebrates had a roughly ten-million-year-long window of opportunity (during the Paleocene) for evolution of gigantism without much competition.[21] During this interval, apex predator niches were often occupied by reptiles, such as terrestrial crocodilians (e.g. Pristichampsus), large snakes (e.g. Titanoboa) or varanid lizards, or by flightless birds[8] (e.g. Paleopsilopterus in South America). This is also the period when megafaunal flightless herbivorous gastornithid birds evolved in the Northern Hemisphere, while flightless paleognaths evolved to large size on Gondwanan land masses and Europe. Gastornithids and at least one lineage of flightless paleognath birds originated in Europe, both lineages dominating niches for large herbivores while mammals remained below 45 kilograms (99 lb) (in contrast with other landmasses like North America and Asia, which saw the earlier evolution of larger mammals) and were the largest European tetrapods in the Paleocene.[22]

Flightless paleognaths, termed ratites, have traditionally been viewed as representing a lineage separate from that of their small flighted relatives, the Neotropic tinamous. However, recent genetic studies have found that tinamous nest well within the ratite tree, and are the sister group of the extinct moa of New Zealand.[21][23][24] Similarly, the small kiwi of New Zealand have been found to be the sister group of the extinct elephant birds of Madagascar.[21] These findings indicate that flightlessness and gigantism arose independently multiple times among ratites via parallel evolution.[25]

Predatory megafaunal flightless birds were often able to compete with mammals in the early Cenozoic. Later in the Cenozoic, however, they were displaced by advanced carnivorans and died out. In North America, the bathornithids Paracrax and Bathornis were apex predators but became extinct by the Early Miocene. In South America, the related phorusrhacids shared the dominant predatory niches with metatherian sparassodonts during most of the Cenozoic but declined and ultimately went extinct after eutherian predators arrived from North America (as part of the Great American Interchange) during the Pliocene. In contrast, large herbivorous flightless ratites have survived to the present.[25]

However, none of the flightless birds of the Cenozoic, including the predatory Brontornis, possibly omnivorous Dromornis stirtoni[25] or herbivorous Aepyornis, ever grew to masses much above 500 kilograms (1,100 lb), and thus never attained the size of the largest mammalian carnivores, let alone that of the largest mammalian herbivores. It has been suggested that the increasing thickness of avian eggshells in proportion to egg mass with increasing egg size places an upper limit on the size of birds.[26][note 1] The largest species of Dromornis, D. stirtoni, may have gone extinct after it attained the maximum avian body mass and was then outcompeted by marsupial diprotodonts that evolved to sizes several times larger.[29]

In giant turtles

[edit]

Giant tortoises were important components of late Cenozoic megafaunas, being present in every nonpolar continent until the arrival of homininans.[30][31] The largest known terrestrial tortoise was Megalochelys atlas, an animal that probably weighed about 1,000 kg (2,200 lb).[32]

Some earlier aquatic Testudines, e.g. the marine Archelon of the Cretaceous[33] and freshwater Stupendemys of the Miocene, were considerably larger, weighing more than 2,000 kg (4,400 lb).[34]

Megafaunal mass extinctions

[edit]

Timing and possible causes

[edit]
Correlations between times of first appearance of humans and unique megafaunal extinction pulses on different land masses
Cyclical pattern of global climate change over the last 450,000 years (based on Antarctic temperatures and global ice volume), showing that there were no unique climatic events that would account for any of the megafaunal extinction pulses

Numerous extinctions occurred during the latter half of the Last Glacial Period when most large mammals went extinct in the Americas, Australia-New Guinea, and Eurasia, including over 80% of all terrestrial animals with a body mass greater than 1,000 kilograms (2,200 lb). Small animals and other organisms like plants were generally unaffected by the extinctions, which is unprecented in previous extinctions during the last 30 million years.[35]

Various theories have attributed the wave of extinctions to human hunting, climate change, disease, extraterrestrial impact, competition from other animals or other causes. However, this extinction near the end of the Pleistocene was just one of a series of megafaunal extinction pulses that have occurred during the last 50,000 years over much of the Earth's surface, with Africa and Asia (where the local megafauna had a chance to evolve alongside modern humans) being comparatively less affected. The latter areas did suffer gradual attrition of megafauna, particularly of the slower-moving species (a class of vulnerable megafauna epitomized by giant tortoises), over the last several million years.[36][37]

Outside the mainland of Afro-Eurasia, these megafaunal extinctions followed a highly distinctive landmass-by-landmass pattern that closely parallels the spread of humans into previously uninhabited regions of the world, and which shows no overall correlation with climatic history (which can be visualized with plots over recent geological time periods of climate markers such as marine oxygen isotopes or atmospheric carbon dioxide levels).[38][39] Australia[40] and nearby islands (e.g., Flores[41]) were struck first around 46,000 years ago, followed by Tasmania about 41,000 years ago (after formation of a land bridge to Australia about 43,000 years ago).[42][43][44] The role of humans in the extinction of Australia and New Guinea's megafauna has been disputed, with multiple studies showing a decline in the number of species prior to the arrival of humans on the continent and the absence of any evidence of human predation;[45][46][47][48] the impact of climate change has instead been cited for their decline.[49][45] Similarly, Japan lost most of its megafauna apparently about 30,000 years ago,[50] North America 13,000 years ago[note 2] and South America about 500 years later,[52][53] Cyprus 10,000 years ago,[54][55] the Antilles 6,000 years ago,[56][57] New Caledonia[58] and nearby islands[59] 3,000 years ago, Madagascar 2,000 years ago,[60] New Zealand 700 years ago,[61] the Mascarenes 400 years ago,[62] and the Commander Islands 250 years ago.[63] Nearly all of the world's isolated islands could furnish similar examples of extinctions occurring shortly after the arrival of humans, though most of these islands, such as the Hawaiian Islands, never had terrestrial megafauna, so their extinct fauna were smaller, but still displayed island gigantism.[38][39]

An analysis of the timing of Holarctic megafaunal extinctions and extirpations over the last 56,000 years has revealed a tendency for such events to cluster within interstadials, periods of abrupt warming, but only when humans were also present. Humans may have impeded processes of migration and recolonization that would otherwise have allowed the megafaunal species to adapt to the climate shift.[64] In at least some areas, interstadials were periods of expanding human populations.[65]

An analysis of Sporormiella fungal spores (which derive mainly from the dung of megaherbivores) in swamp sediment cores spanning the last 130,000 years from Lynch's Crater in Queensland, Australia, showed that the megafauna of that region virtually disappeared about 41,000 years ago, at a time when climate changes were minimal; the change was accompanied by an increase in charcoal, and was followed by a transition from rainforest to fire-tolerant sclerophyll vegetation. The high-resolution chronology of the changes supports the hypothesis that human hunting alone eliminated the megafauna, and that the subsequent change in flora was most likely a consequence of the elimination of browsers and an increase in fire.[66][67][68][69] The increase in fire lagged the disappearance of megafauna by about a century, and most likely resulted from accumulation of fuel once browsing stopped. Over the next several centuries grass increased; sclerophyll vegetation increased with a lag of another century, and a sclerophyll forest developed after about another thousand years.[68] During two periods of climate change about 120,000 and 75,000 years ago, sclerophyll vegetation had also increased at the site in response to a shift to cooler, drier conditions; neither of these episodes had a significant impact on megafaunal abundance.[68] Similar conclusions regarding the culpability of human hunters in the disappearance of Pleistocene megafauna were derived from high-resolution chronologies obtained via an analysis of a large collection of eggshell fragments of the flightless Australian bird Genyornis newtoni,[70][71][69] from analysis of Sporormiella fungal spores from a lake in eastern North America[72][73] and from study of deposits of Shasta ground sloth dung left in over half a dozen caves in the American Southwest.[74][75]

Continuing human hunting and environmental disturbance has led to additional megafaunal extinctions in the recent past, and has created a serious danger of further extinctions in the near future (see examples below). Direct killing by humans, primarily for meat or other body parts, is the most significant factor in contemporary megafaunal decline.[76][77]

A number of other mass extinctions occurred earlier in Earth's geologic history, in which some or all of the megafauna of the time also died out. Famously, in the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event, the non-avian dinosaurs and most other giant reptiles were eliminated. However, the earlier mass extinctions were more global and not so selective for megafauna; i.e., many species of other types, including plants, marine invertebrates[78] and plankton, went extinct as well. Thus, the earlier events must have been caused by more generalized types of disturbances to the biosphere.[79]

Consequences of depletion of megafauna

[edit]

Depletion of herbivorous megafauna results in increased growth of woody vegetation,[80] and a consequent increase in wildfire frequency.[81] Megafauna may help to suppress the growth of invasive plants.[82] Large herbivores and carnivores can suppress the abundance of smaller animals, resulting in their population increase when megafauna are removed.[80]

Effect on nutrient transport

[edit]

Megafauna play a significant role in the lateral transport of mineral nutrients in an ecosystem, tending to translocate them from areas of high to those of lower abundance. They do so by their movement between the time they consume the nutrient and the time they release it through elimination (or, to a much lesser extent, through decomposition after death).[83] In South America's Amazon Basin, it is estimated that such lateral diffusion was reduced over 98% following the megafaunal extinctions that occurred roughly 12,500 years ago.[84][85] Given that phosphorus availability is thought to limit productivity in much of the region, the decrease in its transport from the western part of the basin and from floodplains (both of which derive their supply from the uplift of the Andes) to other areas is thought to have significantly impacted the region's ecology, and the effects may not yet have reached their limits.[85] In the sea, cetaceans and pinnipeds that feed at depth are thought to translocate nitrogen from deep to shallow water, enhancing ocean productivity, and counteracting the activity of zooplankton, which tend to do the opposite.[86]

Effect on methane emissions

[edit]

Large populations of megaherbivores have the potential to contribute greatly to the atmospheric concentration of methane, which is an important greenhouse gas. Modern ruminant herbivores produce methane as a byproduct of foregut fermentation in digestion and release it through belching or flatulence. Today, around 20% of annual methane emissions come from livestock methane release. In the Mesozoic, it has been estimated that sauropods could have emitted 520 million tons of methane to the atmosphere annually,[87] contributing to the warmer climate of the time (up to 10 °C (18 °F) warmer than at present).[87][88] This large emission follows from the enormous estimated biomass of sauropods, and because methane production of individual herbivores is believed to be almost proportional to their mass.[87]

Recent studies have indicated that the extinction of megafaunal herbivores may have caused a reduction in atmospheric methane. This hypothesis is relatively new.[89] One study examined the methane emissions from the bison that occupied the Great Plains of North America before contact with European settlers. The study estimated that the removal of the bison caused a decrease of as much as 2.2 million tons per year.[90] Another study examined the change in the methane concentration in the atmosphere at the end of the Pleistocene epoch after the extinction of megafauna in the Americas. After early humans migrated to the Americas about 13,000 BP, their hunting and other associated ecological impacts led to the extinction of many megafaunal species there. Calculations suggest that this extinction decreased methane production by about 9.6 million tons per year. This suggests that the absence of megafaunal methane emissions may have contributed to the abrupt climatic cooling at the onset of the Younger Dryas.[89] The decrease in atmospheric methane that occurred at that time, as recorded in ice cores, was 2 to 4 times more rapid than any other decrease in the last half million years, suggesting that an unusual mechanism was at work.[89]

[edit]

Pleistocene extinct megafauna

[edit]

Other extinct Cenozoic megafauna

[edit]

Extant

[edit]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Nonavian dinosaur size was not similarly constrained because they had a different relationship between body mass and egg size than birds. The 400 kilograms (880 lb) Aepyornis had larger eggs than nearly all dinosaurs.[27][28]
  2. ^ Analysis indicates that 35 genera of North American mammals went extinct more or less simultaneously in this event.[51]

References

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