产品展示
  • 长安cs75plus水杯垫p装饰改装2022款22车内饰品内饰汽车用品配件
  • 起亚K3扶手箱改装加长低配升级原装汽车中央手扶箱盖原厂增高配件
  • 16-22款骐达中网改装专用装饰亮条 颐达汽车前脸防护装饰用品配件
  • 美国进口毒蜘蛛汽车音响改装套装飞度6.5寸套装喇叭四门高低音DSP
  • 东风特商倒车镜原装神宇擎宇三环大运风度倒车镜汽车反光镜后视镜
联系方式

邮箱:admin@aa.com

电话:020-123456789

传真:020-123456789

汽车配件

Giant pandas once roamed another region of Earth

2024-05-18 20:13:42      点击:265

In the late 1980s, paleontologist Nikolai Spassov stumbled upon fossilized animal teeth in the National Museum of Natural History in Bulgaria. The fossil had a handwritten note with an indecipherable scribble. It took years for Spassov to understand where the fossil came from, and what the note said. 

"I realized that I was holding in my hands the remains of a new species of fossil panda," Spassov told Mashable.

This animal, Agriarctos nikolovi, was a close relative of the giant panda that lives in Southwest China today, though not a direct ancestor. It's remarkable that a similarly-sized panda once roamed present-day Europe and researchers are just learning about the species.

SEE ALSO:The Fat Bear Week winner is the champion we all needed

"The new species from Bulgaria is geologically the latest and the most evolved European species of panda," Spassov emphasized. This discovery provides ideas about the possible evolutionary paths of pandas and how their population dispersed over time, he added. 

"I realized that I was holding in my hands the remains of a new species of fossil panda."

Spassov collaborated with his colleague Qigao Jiangzuo from China, and their findings were publishedin the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. They named the newly discovered species Agriarctos nikoloviin honor of the curator Ivan Nikolov who originally collected the fossilized teeth.

Want more science and tech news delivered straight to your inbox? Sign up for Mashable's Top Stories newsletter today.

Mashable Light SpeedWant more out-of-this world tech, space and science stories?Sign up for Mashable's weekly Light Speed newsletter.By signing up you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.Thanks for signing up!

They ate more than bamboo

The tooth fossils give clues about the ancient panda’s whereabouts and its diet, Spassov explained.

Coal deposits on the stained fossils suggest the ancient panda lived in swampy and humid forested regions, places where decomposed plants eventually (over millions of years) became coal.

A giant panda eating bambooA giant panda eating bamboo.Credit: kiszon pascal / Getty Images

The ancient panda tooth fossils also suggest their feeding habits were different from the iconic giant panda we see today in China. Today’s giant panda diet consists almost entirely of bamboo. But the European panda Nikolov unearthed did not fully rely on bamboo, the study found. That's because their teeth weren't powerful enough to constantly crush hard woody bamboo stems. The ancient pandas likely fed on softer plants, and they were largely vegetarians. 


Related Stories
  • What's Fat Bear Week?
  • Enthralled scientists spot a giant tortoise behaving in a strange, wild way
  • Scientists discover ancient shark swimming in a really strange place
  • Scientists declared these animals extinct in 2021
  • Scientists spot puzzling, unusually perfect holes on the ocean floor

Intense competition led to vegetarianism

European pandas lived alongside carnivores, Spassov said. They competed with large predators like saber-toothed tigers, hyenas, and other bears that roamed during the Miocene period (between 23 and five million yearsago). Amid all this competition, species atop the food chain try to avoid competition by finding different diets. This struggle for finite calories likely drove the panda lineage towards vegetarianism, Spassov explained. "The competition was generally serious," he said.

These panda fossils are critical gap fillers. That means, until now, scientists had a less complete picture of the ancient bears that are closely related to the surviving panda species in China, Juan Abella, a paleontologist at Miquel Crusafont Catalan Institute of Paleontology in Spain, told Mashable. Abella was not part of the new study.

Abella published a similar studyin 2012 that described the oldest known ancestor of the giant panda clade that once wandered Spain, using fossils dated around 11.6 million years ago. The new species Spassov identified is definitely much more closely related to the surviving giant panda, he noted. 

"Hopefully, we will be able to solve all these evolutive paths that lead towards the extant panda," Abella said.

6 easy ways to be more sustainable (that you still refuse to do)
Webb telescope recorded sun explosions in a captivating solar system