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Rat islands 'a laboratory of
future evolution': Rats predicted to fill in Earth's emptying ecospace
Rat islands 'a laboratory of
future evolution': Rats predicted to fill in Earth's emptying ecospace
Date:
February 3,
2014
Source:
University of Leicester
Summary:
New research predicts that rats will
continue to grow and fill a 'significant chunk' of Earth's emptying ecospace.
Their global influence is likely to grow in the future as larger mammals
continue to become extinct.
When Reggae
band UB40 famously asked, 'There's a rat in my kitchen what am I going to
do?" in their 1986 hit single, they were looking for a practical solution
to rid them of a pesky rodent problem
An academic
from the University of Leicester has an answer to this predicament, but it may
not be the one the band was hoping for.
Dr Jan
Zalasiewicz from the Department of Geology at the University of Leicester
suggests that we better get used to having rats around -- and that their global
influence is likely to grow in the future as larger mammals continue to become
extinct.
Dr
Zalasiewicz said: "Rats are one of the best examples of a species that we
have helped spread around the world, and that have successfully adapted to many
of the new environments that they found themselves in.
"They
are now on many, if not most, islands around the world -- and once there, have
proved extraordinarily hard to eradicate. They're often there for good,
essentially. Once there, they have out-competed many native species and at
times have driven them to extinction.
"As a
result, ecospace is being emptied -- and rats are in a good position to re-fill
a significant chunk of it, in the mid to far geological future."
As rats fill
the newly opened ecospace left in the wake of other extinct mammals, over time
they, like many species of animal, experience evolutionary adaptation.
Gigantism can occur in animals as they adapt to their environment and Dr
Zalasiewicz believes that rats will prove to be no exception to this timeless
rule.
He said:
"Animals will evolve, over time, into whatever designs will enable them to
survive and to produce offspring.
"For
instance, in the Cretaceous Period, when the dinosaurs lived, there were
mammals -- but these were very small, rat and mouse-sized, because dinosaurs
occupied the larger ecological niches.
"Only
once the dinosaurs were out of the way did these tiny mammals evolve into many
different forms, including some very large and impressive ones: brontotheriums,
horses, mastodons, mammoths, rhinoceri and more.
"Given
enough time, rats could probably grow to be at least as large as the capybara,
the world's largest rodent, that lives today -- that can reach 80 kilos. If the
ecospace was sufficiently empty, then they could get larger still."
While
looking to what may happen in the future, occurrences of gigantism in rodents
in the past can show the scope for evolution -- the largest extinct rodent
discovered so far, named the Josephoartegasia monesi, was larger than a
bull, and weighed over a ton.
As another
comparison, roughly 50 million years ago, the ancestors of today's blue whale
was a wolf-sized creature living close to shore -- showing how mammals can grow
in size and stature considerably over time.
The
variations in future rat sizes will not simply involve them blowing up to epic
proportions, however. Dr Zalasiewicz suggests that there will be many types of
evolutionary adaptations in rats over time.
He said:
"Animals can evolve to smaller as well as larger sizes. This will depend
on what particular circumstances they find themselves in and what the selective
pressures on them are.
"Each
island that rats are now present on is in effect a laboratory of future
evolution -- and each will produce different results.
"So
there will be future thin rats, future fat rats, slow and heavy rats, fast and
ferocious rats, probably future aquatic rats -- the list goes on. Other animals
will likely follow the same pattern, such as domestic cats, rabbits, goats and
more."
While Dr
Zalasiewicz acknowledges that it is difficult to predict exactly what may
happen in the future, he suspects that rats will be major players in the
geological future of planet Earth, and that, over time, they will produce some
remarkable descendants.
So the next
time there's a rat in the kitchen, we had better get used to it -- because the
rats are here to stay.
Story
Source:
The above
story is based on materials provided by University of Leicester. Note: Materials may be
edited for content and length.