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Evolution: Size Matters

on 01 March 2012

Nature comes in many sizes: leaf sizes
[bonsaitonight.com]
The size of an animal is not fixed. Size is determined by the environment the animal lives in to maximize its survival. Size determines how much you need to feed, what you’re going to feed, and what’s going to feed on you. Everything depends on size.

The elephant is the largest land animal today with the height up to eight feet to the shoulders. But the elephants’ ancestors, the mammoth, were much larger with the exception of the Pygmy Mammoth. Pygmy Mammoths lived off the coast of California twenty-thousand years ago. An adult Pygmy mammoth stands at five feet, seven inches at the shoulders and were one tenth of the size of their cousin mammoths on the mainland. Why was the Pygmy Mammoth so small? Adaptation. The coast of the island, where the mammoths lived, shrunk due to higher water levels and forced the mammoths to reach higher grounds. The only good food source available was at the top of mountains. Larger mammoths had trouble going up the mountains so they slowly died off. Smaller, more maneuverable mammoths survived and breed so the trait of being smaller was passed on through generations.

Size comparison: elephants and mammoths
[BBC Nature Wildlife]
Insects are known to be small, some only centimeters long. Fossil records show that two-hundred sixty million years ago there were Dragonfly’s with wingspans up to three feet wide, millipedes up to eight feet long, and fly’s the size of small birds. How did insects get so big at that time? Back then oxygen levels in the atmosphere were larger than they are now. The amount of oxygen present determines the size of the insects because with more oxygen intake, the muscles expand to larger sizes and increasing the maximum size or insects. An experiment conducted in the video had normal insects raised in a environment with increased oxygen levels. Today’s levels reach percentages up to twenty-one percent, but the insects used in the experiment were exposed to thirty percent oxygen levels. With this insects grew twenty-five to thirty present larger than normal. If this continued, who knows how big insects can get. But there are some limitations to size such as environmental factors, predators, nutrition, and mobility.

All life forms either grow larger or smaller depending on their environment and ability of survival. But one life form has never gown or shrunk, bacteria. Bacteria is the most essential life form. If humans were to disappear from the face of the earth, ninety percent of species wouldn’t notice. If bacteria were to disappear all life forms will disappear in a matter of hours. 

The Blue Whale is the largest life form that ever lived. Whale ancestors were once land animals but after millions of years and frequent aquatic life, they became completely aquatic. The sudden growth sprout whales went through baffled scientist. How can a large animal like the Blue Whale survive by only eating small creatures such as krill? Blue whales feed on large amounts of krill four hours a day to keep up with energy necessity. Also the buoyancy of water helps counteract the effects of gravity on size limitation. So the whale can grow large without any problems.

Sauropods were the largest land animals to ever live. Sauropods included the Brachiosaurus, the Diplodocus, and the Brontosaurs during the Triassic period about one hundred seventy million years ago. How could these beasts grow up to seventy five feet long and weigh up to thirty tons without any limitations or problems? Back during the Triassic period, carbon dioxide levels so high that it caused plant levels and growth to explode to great amounts. The massive amounts of plants provided enough food for the enormous vegetarians to survive and live. Another question that was brought up is how heavy must their bones be to support such weight? Most would think the bones weighted more but actually the muscle is what gave the giants their weight. The bones were hallow just like modern birds today.

Megafauna comparison chart
[Harry-the-Fox]
So where are the dinosaurs’s today? What killed off the dinosaurs? Well, one of the many hypotheses is that about sixty five million years ago, an asteroid with the energy of about one hundred million tons of TNT struck the earth and raised the earth’s temperature to thirteen hundred degrees Fahrenheit. Most of the lush vegetation was gone. All of the giant vegetarians died off because of no food, and then died the carnivores because off all other animals died. Most giant dinosaurs went extinct. Only animals that survived the blast were the warm blooded mammals similar to today’s rodents.

Today’s humans are an average of five foot eight inches. Fifty thousand years ago the average height was six feet. So what caused the shrinkage of humans? A changing environment. The changing environment killed off most of the humans prey they feed on. So they were forced to find a newer source of food, agriculture. They began to grow seeds and eating what grew out of the ground. This new life style couldn’t support their size so just like the pygmy mammoth, they shrunk. Now in days we have a better nutrition diet and so we are starting to grow in average height. And also what is promoting taller humans are women choosing mates that are tall. If taller men continue to reproduce than later generations will continue to be taller. With time the average height can jump from today’s five foot eight to six feet again.
“As human beings and all life on earth moves to the future, all the factors affecting body size from mating, to predation and to environment will continue to be in play and are likely to produce amazing and unexpected results as size continues to evolve.” [unknown author]


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About the Author


I'm Jose Pierre and I like learning about all aspects of culture, both ancient and modern. I enjoy learning how they communicated, expressed themselves, and their technology.


Profile-photo
About the Author


I'm Jose Pierre and I like learning about all aspects of culture, both ancient and modern. I enjoy learning how they communicated, expressed themselves, and their technology.

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