Why Triassic Animals Were Just the Weirdest
PBS Eons・9 minutes read
Drepanosaurs, unique reptiles from the Triassic period, were not bird ancestors but a distinct reptilian lineage with chameleon-like features, adapting to a tree-climbing insectivore niche. The Triassic period allowed for rapid evolutionary changes, but the volcanic activity at its end led to mass extinctions, with dinosaurs emerging as dominant and undergoing adaptive radiation.
Insights
- Drepanosaurs, initially considered bird ancestors, are now understood as a distinct reptilian lineage diverging in the late Permian Period, showcasing unique adaptations for a tree-climbing insectivore niche.
- The Triassic period's lack of competition and opening of ecological niches facilitated explosive evolutionary changes, with dinosaurs emerging as dominant after the extinction event, illustrating a cycle of extinctions followed by adaptive radiation driving the development of new species and body plans.
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Recent questions
What were drepanosaurs?
Reptiles resembling chameleons with bird-like heads.
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