Contributed by Elizabeth Rayne
Feb 7, 2020
Who thought that one of the
survivors of the killer asteroid that head-butted Earth 66 million years ago
and wiped out monster reptiles like T.rex would be ... a turtle?
Laurasichersis relicta may
now be extinct, but it somehow managed to survive an event that sent
temperatures soaring and then plummeting after ash from the collision blocked
sunlight and heat, causing a nuclear winter effect that is thought to have
killed off at least 70% of organisms on Earth. Unearthed in what was once the
continent of Laurasia, the fossil of this prehistoric terrestrial turtle has
now been found to be the only terrestrial turtle that survived the die-off in
the Northern Hemisphere. It also had advantages that even dinosaurs couldn’t
compete with an apex predator, Allosaurus
“No [prehistoric turtle] has
been described in [Laurasia],” said paleontologist Adán Pérez García in a study
recently published in Scientific Reports, adding that the only survivors
were "exclusive to southern Gondwana."
Laurasia and Gondwana were the
two immense subcontinents that split from the initial supercontinent of Pangea.
Laurasia, the northernmost half, included most of what are now Europe and Asia.
The L. relicta holotype (only
specimen known to exist so far) that is thought to have originated in China and
Mongolia and emerged in France, was the only terrestrial turtle in the Northern
Hemisphere to survive the
Cretaceous-Paleogene mass extinction that claimed not only the dinosaurs
but almost all the early turtle species that also roamed the planet. So what
spared this one from being obliterated?
L. relicita was a
meiolaniid, or horned turtle. Meiolaniids were the only primitive turtle
species that held on to life in Gondwana, but L. relicta was the sole
survivor in Laurasia. It had some pretty rad body armor that made up for its
inability to hide out from predators by retracting its neck. Instead, it
developed scary defensive spikes linked together on its neck, legs, and tail. The
23-foot shell that acted as its built-in shield was made up of no more plates
than you would find in a modern turtle, but the underside had more than had
ever been found in any other turtle species.
That ridiculously hard armor
probably made L. relicta much less appetizing to predators, since it
must have been a horror for even dino dagger teeth to chew.
Even the toughest turtle in
Laurasia eventually succumbed to extinction. There is no way it would have
survived without food, and at least some of its food sources must have been
wiped out by the initial asteroid crash. Maybe not enough were left to sustain
the population long enough. Shifts in dominant species couldn't have helped,
either. Though most of those fearsome carnivorous dinosaurs were wiped out,
that only left spaces to be filled higher up in the food chain, and with the evolution
of meat-eating mammals that kept getting larger and more threatening along with
their teeth, it started to disappear.
Ultimately, though, scientists
are still trying to unravel all of the answers. "The reason why
Laurasichersis survived the great extinction, while none of the other primitive
North American, European or Asian land turtles managed to do so, remains a
mystery," Pérez García admitted in a press
release.
Maybe more of the secrets it’s
been hiding in its shell will emerge if and when more specimens crawl out of
wherever they are hiding.
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