Why did Megalodon go extinct? - Jack Cooper and Catalina Pimiento

1,007,000 views ・ 2023-07-03

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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In 1667, a Danish scientist finally concluded that certain mysterious stones
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prized for their supposed medicinal powers,
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hadn’t fallen from the sky during lunar eclipses
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and weren’t serpent tongues.
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In fact, they were fossilized teeth—
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many belonging to a prehistoric species that would come to be called megalodon,
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the biggest shark to ever live.
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So what was it like when megalodon ruled the seas?
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And what brought this formidable predator to extinction?
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Because their skeletons were cartilaginous,
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what remains of megalodons are mostly scattered clues,
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like some isolated vertebrae and lots of their enamel-protected teeth.
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Like many sharks, megalodons could shed and replace thousands of teeth
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over the course of their lives.
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Interestingly, some fossil sites harbor especially high numbers
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of small megalodon teeth.
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Experts believe these were nurseries that supported countless generations
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of budding megalodons.
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They grew up in sheltered and food-packed shallow waters
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before becoming unrivaled adult marine hunters.
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Looking at the similarities with great white shark teeth,
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scientists estimate that megalodons might have stretched up to 20 meters—
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three times longer than great whites.
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And during their reign, which began around 20 million years ago,
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megalodons lived just about everywhere,
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with individuals also potentially undertaking transoceanic migrations.
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The world was warmer and the ocean was brimming with life.
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Otters and dugongs thrived in newly formed kelp forests,
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and baleen whales were at their most diverse.
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Megalodons had no shortage of high-energy, edible options.
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And it seems they were ambitious eaters.
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Generally, as carnivores consume protein-rich meat,
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certain nitrogen isotopes accumulate in their tissues—
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including the enamel of their teeth.
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Analyzing megalodon teeth, scientists confirmed they were apex predators
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that not only ate large prey species—
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but also other predators, perhaps even each other.
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In addition to megalodon’s teeth,
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researchers have access to one exceptionally well-preserved spinal column
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that comprises 141 vertebrae of a 46-year-old megalodon.
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A 3D model of the megalodon’s body suggests that its stomach
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could reach volumes of almost 10,000 liters—
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big enough to fit an entire orca.
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Reconstructing their jaws, researchers think megalodons could eat
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a now-extinct 7-meter sperm whale in as few as four bites.
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And the fossilized bones of ancient cetaceans do indeed show evidence
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of megalodon bite marks— including some that healed over,
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confirming that megalodons pursued live prey.
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But if megalodons were so powerful, why did they go extinct?
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It seems there were a few contributing factors.
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By the time they disappeared around 3.5 million years ago,
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the global climate had cooled,
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causing more glaciers to form and the sea level to drop.
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This dried up many coastal habitats,
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meaning some of the world’s most resource-rich marine sites were lost.
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About a third of all marine megafauna eventually went extinct,
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so fewer prey species were available.
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And megalodons already faced high energetic demands because of their size
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and the mechanism they likely used to regulate their body temperature,
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which allowed them to navigate cold waters
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and attack prey with bursts of speed.
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Environmental changes may have made megalodons vulnerable
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and increasingly put them in competition with other predators,
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including the great white shark, a relative newcomer.
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Because megalodons were highly mobile predators,
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their extinction had global consequences.
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The end of their long-distance travels probably disrupted nutrient transport
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between different ecosystems.
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And many animals were suddenly released
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from the immense predatory pressure of their bite.
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Interestingly, some marine mammals dramatically increased in size afterwards,
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which was perhaps partially afforded
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because they were no longer dealing with such a mega-existential threat.
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Knowing that the decline of apex predators can destabilize entire ecosystems,
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conservationists are working to prevent today’s sharks from facing a similar fate—
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this time, because of humans.
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And meanwhile, the megalodon remains a colossal testament
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to ecological interdependence
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and millions of years of bones well-bitten and waters well-wandered.
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