I was introduced yesterday to the FIMS hypothesis by PBS Eons.
The Fungal-Infection-Mammalian-Selection (hey that ryhmes!) hypothesis asks the question of why reptiles didn’t bounce back as much as mammals did after the asteroid K/Pg extinction event.
After all, they need less energy than mammals as cold-blooded creatures, and they produce way way more offspring than mammals.
One theory is fungi: there was an explosion in fungal activity after the asteroid due to the now dark and dingy hellhole the Earth became, and a ton of fungal spores were floating around at the time, as seen in geological record.
Apparently fungal infections are not that deadly to mammals (it just irritates us), but were disastrous for reptiles. Plus us mammals had a new food source in the absence of plants and meat.
There’s no conclusive proof, still, it’s an interesting theory as to why the dinosaurs didn’t bounce back and why us mammals took over.
Full PBS Eons video here: https://youtu.be/EPXbSx17030
That was really good, thanks! I’ll definitely watch more
They are a gem, them and the MinuteEarth guys.
Tripping Squirrels would make a great band name
Or spiritual successor to goat simulator.
Yes it would
Wait, dinosaurs were not cold-blooded lizards. Are we talking lizards, reptiles including extinct dinosaurs or reptiles including dinosaurs including birds?
Oh, I’m not actually sure. I’m embaraased to say I assumed dinosaurs were cold-blooded… but you’re right, theropods/birds are warm-blooded…
Hmm, I might need to watch the video again
What.
I assumed the same thing.
Are any reptiles vegetarian? Other than turtles? Can they eat mushrooms?
https://reptilehow.org/lizards-that-are-vegetarian/
Green Iguanas and others consist on a leafy diet
As for can they eat mushrooms, apparently Bearded Dragon’s and other common pet lizards should NEVER eat mushrooms, but that in the wild, there are some that dig up specific varieties and eat it