When it comes to adapting to climate change, diversity is the mammal’s best defense.
That is one of the conclusions of the first study of how mammals in
North America adapted to climate change in “deep time” – a period of 56
million years beginning with the Eocene and ending 12,000 years ago with
the terminal Pleistocene extinction when mammoths, saber-toothed
tigers, giant sloths and most of the other megafauna on the continent
disappeared.
“Before we can predict how mammals will respond to climate change in
the future, we need to understand how they responded to climate change
in the assistant professor of earth and environmental studies at
Vanderbilt who directed the study. “It is particularly important to
establish a baseline that shows how they adapted before humans came on
the scene to complicate the picture.”Establishing such a baseline is
particularly important for mammals because their ability to adapt to
environmental changes makes it difficult to predict how they will
respond. For example, mammals have demonstrated the ability to
dramatically alter their size and completely change their diet when
their environment is altered. In addition, mammals have the mobility to
move as the environment shifts.

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