Tuesday, September 30, 2025

Dinosaur Engineers, Laterite Plateau, Social Insects

The latest batch of readings and a video for you readers.

1) How the death of the dinosaurs reengineered Earth. Here is an interesting linkage between dinosaurs, sedimentary rock type distribution and river geometry. Fluvial sedimentary environments are different before (Cretaceous) and just after (Paleocene) dinosaur extinction.

In the latest Cretaceous, large bodied dinosaurs destroyed riverside vegetation, destabilizing banks and preventing stable meanders. Natural levees were breached causing sand to spill onto the floodplains, resulting in an open riverine environment. Post dinosaur extinction, vegetation growth stabilized banks, forming stable channels and meander belts, promoting a sharper division between the constrained channel sands and surrounding floodplain fine mud and organic rich swamps.

Ecosystem engineering by dinosaurs!

2) The Rocky Life: Plateaus of the Monsoon. South of the town of Satara in Maharashtra, the crest of the Western Ghats is mantled by a thick hard iron rich soil known as laterite. This red crust is a deep weathering profile that developed by chemical breakdown of the Deccan basalts (in Maharashtra) and of Precambrian metamorphic rocks (Goa and southern Western Ghats) around 50 million years ago in the Eocene during a warm and wet climate phase. For long, these high regions were treated as "wastelands", devoid of vegetation and wildlife. 

But as biologist Varad Giri explains in this excellent video, there is a hidden world that a careful observer will notice. 

And conservation biologist Neha Sinha writes about (under paywall) the plant life on these rocky plateaus- Why India's "wastelands"are biodiversity hotspots in disguise.  As she evocatively wrote about the Kaas Plateau near Satara on her X timeline- "Lakhs of flowers - carnivorous, parasitic, wild, mesmerising, ephemeral, resilient".

3) One mother for two species via obligate cross-species cloning in ants.  Social insects must rank as some of the most amazing creatures.

In one species of ants, the mother gives birth to offspring of two different species! This happens because the mother uses sperm from another species male to produce the worker caste.

Yes, they have caste too!

I’ll reproduce the abstract here and leave you to roll your eyes in wonder-

“Living organisms are assumed to produce same-species offspring. Here, we report a shift from this norm in Messor ibericus, an ant that lays individuals from two distinct species. In this life cycle, females must clone males of another species because they require their sperm to produce the worker caste. As a result, males from the same mother exhibit distinct genomes and morphologies, as they belong to species that diverged over 5 million years ago. The evolutionary history of this system appears as sexual parasitism that evolved into a natural case of cross-species cloning, resulting in the maintenance of a male-only lineage cloned through distinct species’ ova. We term females exhibiting this reproductive mode as xenoparous, meaning they give birth to other species as part of their life cycle”.

I love the first line-  Living organisms are assumed to produce same-species offspring. After all, we never tried too hard to prove it!

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