| Literature DB >> 28619943 |
Adiël A Klompmaker1,2, Michał Kowalewski2, John Warren Huntley3, Seth Finnegan4.
Abstract
The escalation hypothesis posits that predation by increasingly powerful and metabolically active carnivores has been a major driver of metazoan evolution. We test a key tenet of this hypothesis by analyzing predatory drill holes in fossil marine shells, which provide a ~500-million-year record of individual predator-prey interactions. We show that drill-hole size is a robust predictor of body size among modern drilling predators and that drill-hole size (and thus inferred predator size and power) rose substantially from the Ordovician to the Quaternary period, whereas the size of drilled prey remained stable. Together, these trends indicate a directional increase in predator-prey size ratios. We hypothesize that increasing predator-prey size ratios reflect increases in prey abundance, prey nutrient content, and predation among predators.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28619943 DOI: 10.1126/science.aam7468
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728