Laboratory of Paleontology, Faculty of Geology and Geophysics, University of Bucharest, 010041 Bucharest, Romania;
Department of Natural Sciences, Transylvanian Museum Society, 400009 Cluj-Napoca, Romania.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2018 May 8;115(19):4857-4862. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1801143115. Epub 2018 Apr 23.
The island effect is a well-known evolutionary phenomenon, in which island-dwelling species isolated in a resource-limited environment often modify their size, anatomy, and behaviors compared with mainland relatives. This has been well documented in modern and Cenozoic mammals, but it remains unclear whether older, more primitive Mesozoic mammals responded in similar ways to island habitats. We describe a reasonably complete and well-preserved skeleton of a kogaionid, an enigmatic radiation of Cretaceous island-dwelling multituberculate mammals previously represented by fragmentary fossils. This skeleton, from the latest Cretaceous of Romania, belongs to a previously unreported genus and species that possesses several aberrant features, including an autapomorphically domed skull and one of the smallest brains relative to body size of any advanced mammaliaform, which nonetheless retains enlarged olfactory bulbs and paraflocculi for sensory processing. Drawing on parallels with more recent island mammals, we interpret these unusual neurosensory features as related to the island effect. This indicates that the ability to adapt to insular environments developed early in mammalian history, before the advent of therian mammals, and mammals with insular-related modifications were key components of well-known dwarfed dinosaur faunas. Furthermore, the specimen suggests that brain size reduction, in association with heightened sensory acuity but without marked body size change, is a novel expression of the island effect in mammals.
岛屿效应是一种众所周知的进化现象,在这种现象中,生活在资源有限环境中的岛屿物种与大陆亲缘物种相比,其体型、解剖结构和行为常常会发生改变。这种现象在现代和新生代哺乳动物中已有充分的记录,但仍不清楚更古老、更原始的中生代哺乳动物是否以类似的方式对岛屿栖息地做出反应。我们描述了一个合理完整且保存完好的 kogaionid 骨骼,这是一种神秘的白垩纪岛屿居住的多瘤齿兽类辐射,以前仅由零碎的化石代表。这个骨架来自罗马尼亚的晚白垩世,属于以前未被报道的属和种,具有几个异常特征,包括特有的穹顶头骨和相对身体大小而言最小的大脑之一,尽管如此,它仍然保留了增大的嗅球和用于感觉处理的副嗅球。借鉴与更近的岛屿哺乳动物的相似之处,我们将这些不寻常的神经感觉特征解释为与岛屿效应有关。这表明适应岛屿环境的能力在哺乳动物历史的早期就已经发展起来,早于有胎盘哺乳动物的出现,并且具有岛屿相关修饰的哺乳动物是著名的矮小恐龙动物群的关键组成部分。此外,该标本表明,大脑体积缩小与感官敏锐度提高有关,但身体大小没有明显变化,这是哺乳动物中岛屿效应的一种新表现。