This Is That Paper I Was Telling You All About By The Paleontologist At My University, Dr. Plotnick;

On estimating the modern mass extinction rate and comparing with the fossil records of past mass extinctions

This is that paper I was telling you all about by the paleontologist at my university, Dr. Plotnick; give it a read!

More Posts from Llamaslikesciencetoo and Others

9 years ago
The Dancers Of The Sea | Peter Chadwick

The dancers of the sea | Peter Chadwick

9 years ago

Inside the Rugged Lives of Mongolia’s Nomads 

Filmmaker Brandon Li captures life in western Mongolia in his film Nomads of Mongolia. Watch the nomadic Kazakh people train eagles to hunt, herd yaks, and race camels in this visually stunning short.

By: National Geographic. Donate to the National Geographic Society

9 years ago

Date Idea: binge watch all the Free Willy movies

9 years ago
Red-lined Bubble Snail (Bullina Lineata)
Red-lined Bubble Snail (Bullina Lineata)
Red-lined Bubble Snail (Bullina Lineata)

Red-lined bubble snail (Bullina lineata)

The red-lined bubble snail, is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusc in the family Bullinidae. This snail has a milky-white mantle with iridescent blue edges. There are small black eyes on the head between the head shield processes. The shell has a white background with horizontally spiraling red brown bands which are crossed by vertical bands in the same color. The length is 15 to 25 mm. This species occurs in the sublittoral zone of the Indo-Pacific from Japan to Australia and New Zealand.

photo credits: seaslugsofhawaii, Sylke Rohrlach, Richard Ling

9 years ago

A video recording the exciting moment when a diver looking for Megalodon teeth, finds a massive, 6 ¼", fossil tooth off the coast of the Carolinas.

Be sure to follow MegalodonSwag on Tumblr for more great Megalodon related news, information, videos and more…

8 years ago

It’s Jehol Biota Day!

The Jehol Biota is the ecosystem of the Yixian and Jiofotang Formations of northeastern China, dating between 133 and 120 million years ago in the Early Cretaceous (from the Valanginian to Aptian ages). 

It is famous because of it’s method of preservation - there were ash eruptions periodically, and the fossils are Lagerstätten, meaning that they were exceptionally well preserved with articulated skeletons, soft tissues, stomach contents, and even coloration. 

This has led to an amazing understanding of various types of dinosaurs and other prehistoric animals, especially very birdy dinosaurs. 

These animals lived in forests around lakes, dominated by conifers but featuring the earliest flowering plants - Archaefructus, which may have been a water plant.

image

By Shizhao, CC BY-SA 2.5

There were dry seasons, but it was a mostly wet formation, as many of the plants grew in very wet habitats and probably stayed close to bodies of water. 

The Yixian Formation was the older of the two main Jehol Formations, and featured many, many animals. Of invertebrates, there were spiders, crustaceans, dragonflies, flies, wasps, many other insects, and molluscs, of too many to list. Fish included the lamprey Mesomyzon, ray finned fishes such as Lycoptera, Peipiaosteus, Protopsephurus, Sinamia, and Yanosteus, and a potential shark. There were frogs and toads like Callobatrachus, Liaobatrachus, and Mesophryne, as well as a salamander, Liaoxitriton. 

image

Callobatrachus by Emily Willoughby, CC BY-SA 3.0

There were mammals, too, of course - the stem-placental Acristatherium, the stem-marsupials Akidolestes, Maotherium, Zhangheotherium, and Sinodelphys, the stem-therian (Therians being the group of Marsupials and Placentals) Eomaia, the multituberculate (a group of mammals which seem to also be stem-therians) Sinobaatar, and a significant number of Eutriconodonts, a group of early derived mammals, including Chaoyangodens, Gobiconodon, Jeholodens, Juchilestes, Meemannodon, Repenomamus, and Yanoconodon. 

image

Eomaia by Nobu Tamura, CC BY-SA 3.0

There were the weird early derived Saurians (the group consisting of Lepidosauromorphs and Archosauromorphs, so Extant Reptiles), Choristoderans - Hyphalosaurus, which is known from thousands of specimens, and Monjurosuchus. Lizards included Dalinghosaurus, similar to the modern Chinese Crocodile Lizard; Liushusaurus and Yabeinosaurus, lizards relatedx to modern geckos and skinks, and Xianglong, a gliding lizard. Turtles included Manchurochelys and Ordosemys, both Cryptodirans, a group including giant tortoises, sea turtles, tortoises, snapping turtles, and others. 

image

Hyphalosaurus by Matt Martyniuk, CC BY 3.0

image

Xianglong by Nobu Tamura, CC BY 3.0

The heroes of the formation were, of course, the Avemetatarsalians. There were many pterosaurs - Beipiaopterus, Boreopterus, Cathayopterus, Elanodactylus, Eosipterus, Feilongus, Gegepterus, Gladocephaloideus, Haopterus, Moganopterus, Ningchengopterus, Pterofiltrus, and Zhenyuanopterus. 

image

Ningchengopterus by Nobu Tamura, CC BY 3.0

Ornithischians included the ornithopods Bolong, Jeholosaurus, and Jinzhousaurus, the ankylosaur Liaoningosaurus, and the ceratopsians Liaoceratops and Psittacosaurus. There were sauropods too - the titanosauriform Dongbeititan, a potential titanosaur, and an animal that has for now been referred to Euhelopus. But the real heavyweights were the theropods. 

image

Jeholosaurus by @ryuukibart

There were the tyrannosauroids Yutyrannus - one of the best known tyrannosauroids with feathers - and Dilong; the compsognathus Huaxiagnathus, Sinocalliopteryx, and Sinosauropteryx - the first non-avian dinosaur known to have feathers, and also with known coloration; early Ornithomimosaurs such as Hexing and Shenzhousaurus; the early derived maniraptoran Yixianosaurus; Beipiaosaurus, a therizinosaur; and tons of Chickenparrots, such as Similicaudipteryx, Protarchaeopteryx, Ningyuansaurus, Incisivosaurus, and Caudipteryx. 

image

Yutyrannus, model from “Dinosaurs Among Us”, photo by me 

image

Sinosauropteryx by Matt Martyniuk, CC BY-SA 3.0

There were many Dromaeosaurids (raptors), such as Graciliraptor, Tianyuraptor, Zhenyuanlong - a raptor known from nearly complete feather traces, including extremely large wings - and Sinornithosaurus, the first Dromaeosaurid found with feathers. There were also lots of Troodontids, such as Sinusonasus, Sinovenator, and Mei, as well as unnamed members of both groups. There were early-derived Avialans such as Zhongornis, Jixiangornis, Confuciusornis, and Changchengornis. There were loads of Enantiornithines, such as Bohaiornis, Eoenantironis, Dalingheornis, Liaoningornis, Longirostravis, and Shanweiniao - an Enantiornithine that had a tail fan like modern birds. There were also Euornithines - the group which contains modern birds - such as Longicrusavis, Hongshanornis, and Archaeorhynchus. In short, this was an extremely birdy formation indeed. 

image

Zhenyuanlong by Emily Willoughby, CC BY-SA 4.0

image

Shanweiniao by Nobu Tamura, CC BY 3.0

The Jiuofotang Formation was slightly younger, but was similar to the Yixian in terms of the animals there. There were ray finned fishes such as Jinanichthys, Lycoptera, Peipiaosteus, Protsephurus, and Sinamia. There was the mammal Liaoconodon, a Eutriconodont, as well as an unnamed mammal similar to Eomaia from the Yixian Formation. There were also Choristoderans like Philydrosaurus, Ikechosaurus, and Liaoxisaurus. 

image

Liaoconodon by Dylan Bajda, CC BY-SA 4.0

There were many, many, many pterosaurs. This included Chaoyangopterus, Eoazhdarcho, Guidraco, Ikrandraco, Jidapterus, Liaoningopterus, Liaoxipterus, Linlongopterus, Nemicolopterus, Nurhachius, Shenzhoupterus, and Sinopterus. And, as we shall see, there were a lot of flying theropods as well, indicating that the two groups did live alongside one another just fine, and the common narrative of “birds replaced pterosaurs” has little foundation in the fossil record. 

image

Ikrandraco, by Fabrizio De Rossi, from www.pteros.com

image

Chaoyangopterus, by Joschua Knüppe, from www.pteros.com

There were only a few Ornithischians - namely Chuanqilong, an ankylosaur, and Psittacosaurus, a ceratopsian. There is also an unnamed titanosaur from the formation. As for theropods, there were a lot. The tyrannosauroid Sinotyrannus was the largest predator there, there was the Chickenparrot Similicaudipteryx, and of course one of the most famous raptors, Microraptor, which was a four-winged Dromaeosaurid that we know had iridescent black feathers. 

image

Microraptor by @artisticthingem

There were many early derived Avialans, such as Confuciusornis, Dalianraptor, Omnivoropteryx, Sapeornis, Shenshiornis, Zhongjianornis, and my personal favorite, Jeholornis, a theropod we know was a seed-eater, which is actually quite hard to determine from fossils. There were many Enantiornithines, such as Alethoalaornis, Boluochia, Cathayornis, Cuspirostrisornis, Dapingfangornis, Eocathayornis, Gracilornis, Huoshanornis, Largirostrornis, Longchengornis, Longipteryx, Rapaxavis, Xiangornis, and one of my favorites, Sinornis, which is thought to have perched. As for Euornithines, there was Chaoyangia, Jianchangornis, Parahongshanornis, Schizooura, Songlingornis, Yanornis, and Yixianornis. 

image

Jeholornis by Matt Martyniuk, CC BY-SA 3.0

image

Sinornis, by Pavel Rhia, CC BY-SA 3.0

It’s plain to see why the Jehol Biota is so fascinating. At least for me, I love it because it’s clearly one of the best pictures we have of Pennaraptoran evolution - the amount of birdie dinosaurs is absolutely ridiculous. But there’s really something for everyone here - there are titanosaur-like things, some of the earliest Ceratopsians, tons of Pterosaurs, weird Choristoderans, and even some insights into the evolution of early mammals and different types of amphibians and fish, as well as the first flowering plants. The Jehol Biota is one of the best ecosystems we know about, and it definitely deserves celebration! 

Sources:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jehol_Biota

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jiufotang_Formation

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yixian_Formation

9 years ago
Found This On My Social Media… It’s Time For Australians To Respect Sharks As Sentient Creatures
Found This On My Social Media… It’s Time For Australians To Respect Sharks As Sentient Creatures
Found This On My Social Media… It’s Time For Australians To Respect Sharks As Sentient Creatures
Found This On My Social Media… It’s Time For Australians To Respect Sharks As Sentient Creatures
Found This On My Social Media… It’s Time For Australians To Respect Sharks As Sentient Creatures

Found this on my social media… It’s time for Australians to respect sharks as sentient creatures that can contribute to GDP as shark tourism that does not include hooking, netting or sport and trophy fishing. The Bahamas has done this and together with Ocean Ramsey (pictured with great white shark) I have experienced first hand what it means to Bahamians to have their sharks bring valued income for local businesses whether they love, hate or remain fearful of sharks. The animals pictured in the catch and release photos that went viral are likely to have been killed soon after release by healthier sharks in the area. As sentient sharks for human-shark interaction, both sharks pictured could generate over $5 million for a charter operator. That does not include accommodation, dining, car hire and regional products and services for coastal communities that defy the existing JAWS affected paradigm and do as The Bahamas has done for tigers, hammerheads, bull sharks, Caribbean reefies, nurses and all shark species in their territorial waters. Be a champion for sharks and flag your disapproval of angling trips of this kind. If these guys really have what it takes to be heroes, have them join me and Ocean Ramsey for a photo with creatures acting naturally in their company in their element. Unfortunately we would need to do this in Hawaii, Mexico, Florida or The Bahamas for the fact that there is no place that I know of in Australia to do this in 2016.

8 years ago
So You Think You Know Cephalopods?

So You Think You Know Cephalopods?

Pop Quiz! Georgia Aquarium Wants to Test Your Knowledge of Cephalopods

9 years ago
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llamaslikesciencetoo - This is my side blog about science
This is my side blog about science

Mainly interested in ecology, but also the entirety of science.

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