Insects May Have Had a Hand In Dinosaur Extinction
eldavojohn writes "Everyone's got their favorite theories of Dinosaur extinction, but new speculation is rampant in a book that gives cause to believe it may have been disease-carrying insects. Due to the length of their slow and eventual extinction (the 'K-T Boundary'), it is argued that this would more likely be attributed to the spread of disease and the rise of parasitic insects like ticks or biting flies. Are our immune systems the only reason any animals survived?"
Reptiles have perfectly good immune systems: in the case of alligators, they're better than human ones. However, since reptiles are cold-blooded, the seasonal temperature variation means reptiles have suppressed immune function during cold periods, so they'd be predisposed to higher mortality from disease after a meteorite strike or extensive volcanic activity puts enough debris in the atmosphere to reduce the Earth's temperature.
The Black Death spread across Europe and the Mideast in less than 4 years -- individual diseases can move very quickly. The idea that the rise of a class of disease vectors, biting insects, might've gradually led to higher mortality, is interesting, and something I'd never read about.
Nostalgia's not what it used to be.
You mean like how fleas carrying the plague made rats and humans extinct during the dark ages?
IIRC insects predate dinasaurs. Sorry, I'm a skep tick.
The book's author isn't a palentologist, he is with the Department of Entomology at Oregon State University. He is (like I am now) making claims he does not have the credentials for.
mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
Uh, the species of rat which carried the Black Death did very nearly go extinct, and it wiped out one third of the population of Europe in just two years, in some areas as much as 60-75%. If that had been combined that with other pressures occurring simultaneously, like extreme changes in the environment, then yes, even two of evolution's greatest generalists could have been brought low.
I can't say I believe it, but I also don't find it inherently implausible.
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Antibacterial != antiviral. Their immune systems are very good at protecting against bacterial infection in those environments (and some reptiles, like the kimodo dragon actually have nasty bacteria living in their saliva that acts as a natural poison to weaken prey) but viral immunology is completely different. And viral mutations can move quickly though a population where they were previously benign.