Scientists examining the teeth of ancient pandas discovered at a fossil site in southern Germany have identified evidence that rewrites our understanding of their evolutionary history. Unlike modern pandas, these extinct bears were omnivorous.
Existing giant pandas are famous for their laziness and their fastidious diet of bamboo shoots, leaves and stems. In fact, they are the most herbivorous species in the whole Carnivora order (mammals that are specialized in primarily eating meat), despite having the digestive system of a carnivore.
This makes the eating habits of modern pandas quite peculiar, and scientists are still not sure when they developed this specialized niche, especially as their ancestors were significantly less fussy.
An international team from Hamburg, Frankfurt, Madrid, and Valencia recently discovered the fossilized remains of an extinct species of panda, Kretzoiarctos beatrix, at the Hammerschmiede site in Allgäu, Germany.
K. beatrix is the oldest known ancestor of modern giant pandas. They lived around 11 million years ago and were slightly smaller than today’s species. Despite this, the extinct panda was still a chunky animal, capable of weighing over 100 kilograms (220 pounds).
To date, most of their fossils have been found in Spain, suggesting that pandas originated in Europe...
Scientists examining the teeth of ancient pandas discovered at a fossil site in southern Germany have identified evidence that rewrites our understanding of their evolutionary history. Unlike modern pandas, these extinct bears were omnivorous.
Existing giant pandas are famous for their laziness and their fastidious diet of bamboo shoots, leaves and stems. In fact, they are the most herbivorous species in the whole Carnivora order (mammals that are specialized in primarily eating meat), despite having the digestive system of a carnivore.
This makes the eating habits of modern pandas quite peculiar, and scientists are still not sure when they developed this specialized niche, especially as their ancestors were significantly less fussy.
An international team from Hamburg, Frankfurt, Madrid, and Valencia recently discovered the fossilized remains of an extinct species of panda, Kretzoiarctos beatrix, at the Hammerschmiede site in Allgäu, Germany.
K. beatrix is the oldest known ancestor of modern giant pandas. They lived around 11 million years ago and were slightly smaller than today’s species. Despite this, the extinct panda was still a chunky animal, capable of weighing over 100 kilograms (220 pounds).
To date, most of their fossils have been found in Spain, suggesting that pandas originated in Europe and migrated to China at some point in the past. But unlike modern pandas, K. beatrix was actually an omnivore, eating both plants and meat.
The researchers compared the fossilized teeth of K. Beatrix with those of other bear species, including polar bears, brown bears, South American spectacled bears, and both modern giant pandas and their extinct ancestors.
They concluded that the bear from Hammerschmiede did not specialize in hard plants, unlike its modern ancestors, but it also didn’t eat meat exclusively, like polar bears. As such, K. beatrix had a diet that was much more like modern brown bears, containing both plant and animal matter.