The secret weapon that let dinosaurs take over the planet | Emma Schachner

119,021 views ・ 2020-01-28

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Translator: Joseph Geni Reviewer: Camille Martínez
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We've all heard about how the dinosaurs died.
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The story I'm going to tell you
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happened over 200 million years before the dinosaurs went extinct.
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This story starts at the very beginning,
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when dinosaurs were just getting their start.
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One of the biggest mysteries in evolutionary biology
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is why dinosaurs were so successful.
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What led to their global dominance for so many years?
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When people think about why dinosaurs were so amazing,
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they usually think about the biggest or the smallest dinosaur,
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or who was the fastest,
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or who had the most feathers,
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the most ridiculous armor, spikes or teeth.
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But perhaps the answer had to do with their internal anatomy --
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a secret weapon, so to speak.
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My colleagues and I, we think it was their lungs.
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I am both a paleontologist and a comparative anatomist,
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and I am interested in understanding
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how the specialized dinosaur lung helped them take over the planet.
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So we are going to jump back over 200 million years
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to the Triassic period.
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The environment was extremely harsh,
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there were no flowering plants,
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so this means that there was no grass.
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So imagine a landscape filled with all pine trees and ferns.
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At the same time, there were small lizards,
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mammals, insects,
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and there were also carnivorous and herbivorous reptiles --
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all competing for the same resources.
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Critical to this story
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is that oxygen levels have been estimated to have been as low as 15 percent,
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compared to today's 21 percent.
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So it would have been crucial for dinosaurs to be able to breathe
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in this low-oxygen environment,
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not only to survive
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but to thrive and to diversify.
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So, how do we know what dinosaur lungs were even like,
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since all that remains of a dinosaur generally is its fossilized skeleton?
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The method that we use is called "extant phylogenetic bracketing."
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This is a fancy way of saying that we study the anatomy --
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specifically in this case, the lungs and skeleton --
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of the living descendants of dinosaurs on the evolutionary tree.
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So we would look at the anatomy of birds,
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who are the direct descendants of dinosaurs,
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and we'd look at the anatomy of crocodilians,
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who are their closest living relatives,
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and then we would look at the anatomy of lizards and turtles,
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who we can think of like their cousins.
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And then we apply these anatomical data to the fossil record,
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and then we can use that to reconstruct the lungs of dinosaurs.
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And in this specific instance,
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the skeleton of dinosaurs most closely resembles that of modern birds.
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So, because dinosaurs were competing with early mammals during this time period,
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it's important to understand the basic blueprint of the mammalian lung.
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Also, to reintroduce you to lungs in general,
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we will use my dog Mila of Troy,
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the face that launched a thousand treats,
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as our model.
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(Laughter)
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This story takes place inside of a chest cavity.
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So I want you to visualize the ribcage of a dog.
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Think about how the spinal vertebral column
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is completely horizontal to the ground.
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This is how the spinal vertebral column is going to be
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in all of the animals that we'll be talking about,
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whether they walked on two legs
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or four legs.
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Now I want you to climb inside of the imaginary ribcage and look up.
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This is our thoracic ceiling.
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This is where the top surface of the lungs comes into direct contact
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with the ribs and vertebrae.
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This interface is where our story takes place.
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Now I want you to visualize the lungs of a dog.
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On the outside, it's like a giant inflatable bag
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where all parts of the bag expand during inhalation
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and contract during exhalation.
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Inside of the bag, there's a series of branching tubes,
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and these tubes are called the bronchial tree.
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These tubes deliver the inhaled oxygen to, ultimately, the alveolus.
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They cross over a thin membrane into the bloodstream by diffusion.
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Now, this part is critical.
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The entire mammalian lung is mobile.
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That means it's moving during the entire respiratory process,
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so that thin membrane, the blood-gas barrier,
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cannot be too thin or it will break.
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Now, remember the blood-gas barrier, because we will be returning to this.
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So, you're still with me?
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Because we're going to start birds and it gets crazy,
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so hold on to your butts.
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(Laughter)
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The bird is completely different from the mammal.
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And we are going to be using birds as our model
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to reconstruct the lungs of dinosaurs.
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So in the bird,
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air passes through the lung, but the lung does not expand or contract.
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The lung is immobilized,
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it has the texture of a dense sponge
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and it's inflexible and locked into place on the top and sides by the ribcage
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and on the bottom by a horizontal membrane.
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It is then unidirectionally ventilated
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by a series of flexible, bag-like structures
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that branch off of the bronchial tree,
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beyond the lung itself,
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and these are called air sacs.
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Now, this entire extremely delicate setup is locked into place
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by a series of forked ribs
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all along the thoracic ceiling.
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Also, in many species of birds,
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extensions arise from the lung
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and the air sacs,
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they invade the skeletal tissues --
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usually the vertebrae, sometimes the ribs --
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and they lock the respiratory system into place.
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And this is called "vertebral pneumaticity."
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The forked ribs and the vertebral pneumaticity
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are two clues that we can hunt for in the fossil record,
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because these two skeletal traits
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would indicate that regions of the respiratory system of dinosaurs
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are immobilized.
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This anchoring of the respiratory system
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facilitated the evolution of the thinning of the blood-gas barrier,
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that thin membrane over which oxygen was diffusing into the bloodstream.
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The immobility permits this because a thin barrier is a weak barrier,
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and the weak barrier would rupture if it was actively being ventilated
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like a mammalian lung.
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So why do we care about this?
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Why does this even matter?
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Oxygen more easily diffuses across a thin membrane,
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and a thin membrane is one way of enhancing respiration
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under low-oxygen conditions --
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low-oxygen conditions like that of the Triassic period.
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So, if dinosaurs did indeed have this type of lung,
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they'd be better equipped to breathe than all other animals,
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including mammals.
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So do you remember the extant phylogenetic bracket method
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where we take the anatomy of modern animals,
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and we apply that to the fossil record?
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So, clue number one was the forked ribs of modern birds.
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Well, we find that in pretty much the majority of dinosaurs.
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So that means that the top surface of the lungs of dinosaurs
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would be locked into place,
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just like modern birds.
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Clue number two is vertebral pneumaticity.
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We find this in sauropod dinosaurs and theropod dinosaurs,
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which is the group that contains predatory dinosaurs
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and gave rise to modern birds.
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And while we don't find evidence of fossilized lung tissue in dinosaurs,
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vertebral pneumaticity gives us evidence of what the lung was doing
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during the life of these animals.
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Lung tissue or air sac tissue was invading the vertebrae,
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hollowing them out just like a modern bird,
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and locking regions of the respiratory system into place,
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immobilizing them.
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The forked ribs
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and the vertebral pneumaticity together
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were creating an immobilized, rigid framework
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that locked the respiratory system into place
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that permitted the evolution of that superthin, superdelicate blood-gas barrier
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that we see today in modern birds.
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Evidence of this straightjacketed lung in dinosaurs
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means that they had the capability to evolve a lung
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that would have been able to breathe
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under the hypoxic, or low-oxygen, atmosphere of the Triassic period.
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This rigid skeletal setup in dinosaurs would have given them
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a significant adaptive advantage over other animals, particularly mammals,
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whose flexible lung couldn't have adapted
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to the hypoxic, or low-oxygen, atmosphere of the Triassic.
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This anatomy may have been the secret weapon of dinosaurs
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that gave them that advantage over other animals.
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And this gives us an excellent launchpad
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to start testing the hypotheses of dinosaurian diversification.
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This is the story of the dinosaurs' beginning,
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and it's just the beginning of the story of our research into this subject.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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