Where do animal hibernation and fallen leaves really come from.

in #science7 years ago

Since some animals hibernate in winter and many trees lose their leaves in winter, I guess its easy for us to assume that these behaviors developed in response to the colder, less productive season of the year.

As I have been delving into a lot on paleoclimates in deep geological time another, also likely, factor raised its head.

Much of what we see around us, in the form of plants and animals living today, only begins to emerge in the time of the Dinosaurs and much later.

The time of the dinos, from a couple of million years ago to about 70 million years ago was very, very, did I say very? different.

For instance there was no grass early on ... Imagine that, mainly conifers and ferns with only flowering plants and some grass making their appearance or becoming dominant only towards the end of the dinos in the Cretaceous Period.


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Climate was also extremely different then. The tropics would have been unbearably hot and humid by our standards and there was little or no ice at the poles.

Fossil evidence shows that the poles were heavily forested, the climate there would not require today's polar gear and was incredibly mild by comparison. Plants and animals would have been able to go about their lives at the poles much like they did over the rest of the planet.

There would be one significant difference though, that could not be mitigated by favorable climate and an extremely humid atmosphere.

The poles have perpetual sunlight and daytime in summer and perpetual night in winter.

It would be pretty useless and energy expensive for a tree to maintain its canopy of photosynthesizing leaves through the three or more month long night of the polar winter.

Natural selection would have favored emerging species that conserved energy by shedding their leaves and going dormant during these long dark nights.

Conifers that had emerged long before the flowering plants and deciduous trees were already well selected and "set in their genetic ways" so less likely to evolve in this direction.

But the emerging species would have easily passed these genetic capabilities onto their descendants. Similarly hibernation and other dormancy capabilities would have been favored in animal species and have been passed down.

I think its safe to assume that, hibernation and other forms of low activity or dormancy in both the animal and vegetable kingdom not only evolved in response to lower temperatures and less productive seasons but also the months long cycles of perpetual darkness found at vast periods of the geological past when temperate species emerged, lived and thrived at the poles of the earth.

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I have 4 plastic dinosaurs on my drawing desk (i've been painting dino footprints) as I'm reading this. They said your article was very interesting.

A creature that i find fascinating is the Spadefoot toad. It can stay underground in a state of suspended animation for years, surviving extreme heats.

Hahahaahaha, maybe they are smoking Spadefoot toad-skin 😆

What are dino's smoking?

They are mainly inhaling mercury laced volcanic gas clouds... passive smoking of course.

I'm so grateful @gavvet thank you so much sir for the opportunity to learn from you

Is there not also a species of frog that freezes over the winter periods and defrosts for the spring? Pretty cool creatures!

Gracias @ gavvet
Es un post genial, yo amo la paleoarqueología desde niño.
Tu hipótesis me parece viable e interesantes.

I was born in the far North, in the Arctic circle and lived there for 18 years. Polar night in my area lasted for 40 days, every year.

Despite the fact that both my parents are southerners and they came to the North as young, they could not fully adapt to such a severe and unusual climate.

People who come to the North at a Mature age begin to experience serious health problems already on 2-3rd year: allergic reactions to cold, the constant pressure surges, your teeth begin to break down, not to mention the mental health. The lack of light in winter and its constant presence in the summer it is a serious test for the psyche.

I am a first generation northerner in our family and withstand local environmental conditions without problems. The polar night has no harmful effects on my body and I can live without vitamins, my waking cycle is quite extensive.

Sounds like you are a good case of epigenetics then! thanks for sharing your experience with arctic darkness.

Now I live in a middle climatic zone. So I'm curious will my children, born here, retain the genetic characteristics of my body, which will allow them to live normally in the far North.

After all I'm only a first generation northerner. And most likely my genetic mutations are not so stable to so easily move to the next generation.

Your parents likely have whatever you have as will your children, but in this case without the stimulation very early on in development and childhood those genes will not likely be turned on in the same way they were in your case.

The DNA has not changed, simply how it is expressed in certain individuals based on external stimuli at a crucial time during development.

Of course you are right about the fact that DNA will not be lost. And I also tend to believe that without stimulants in the early stages of a child's development, the body's unnecessary abilities will simply be suppressed.

Thank you for this dialogue!

Upvoted and resteemed. Highly appreciated gavvet. What is the background of your interest in prehistoric events and developments?

Wow! Amazing and great post @gavvet.

Brilliant concept.

I really liked your post.

Thanks for sharing this post.

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Great post..but i would to know if "Could Humans Hibernate?"

We could not. Although, as seen in many experiments, we can spend a lot of time, months, without eating (only drinking water), provided that we have enough bodyfat for energy demands. Should one do it? I'd say no, unless under strict medical supervision.

This is highly unlikely, because there are no primates that hibernate. And our species originated in warm climates. When our ancestors migrated to colder regions, they underwent some genetic changes, the most notable one being pale skin to allow for more UV absorption abd adequate vitamin D synthesis, and very likely by the time they (and the Neanderthals as well) reached the Northern latitudes, they already were efficient tool users and skilled hunters and they made clothes. They would have had no reason to undergo a massive evolutionary change in so many systems, to evolve the capability to hibernate from scratch. Let alone lose it afterwards.

I would say this depends of your definition of “hibernate.” Early man likely spent 20–23.5 hours a day in his home, cave, or den during the coldest parts of the winter. Imagine how cold it was not having layers of clothing especially designed for warmth. Think how cold your feet would get without thick layers of soft socks and commercial footwear. You don’t even have to go back to prehistoric man, even in the 1800’s, many families would bundle up and sleep 14–16 hours a day, or at least severely limit their activity, because it was dark and in many parts of the world, uncomfortably cold.

Yes, there has been a big change in the world
We hope that tomorrow will be better and together we will protect this world to live under the banner of peace

Dont play with nature. It has its own cycle.

its amazing when you think about the transformation that has taken place in our world since the time of the dinosaurs and it makes one wonder what will really become of planet earth with all these recent climate changes.