In the late 1980s, paleontologist Nikolai Spassov stumbled upon fossilized animal teeth in the National Museum of Natural History in Bulgaria. The fossil had a handwritten note with an indecipherable scribble. It took years for Spassov to understand where the fossil came from, and what the note said.
"I realized that I was holding in my hands the remains of a new species of fossil panda," Spassov told Mashable.
This animal, Agriarctos nikolovi, was a close relative of the giant panda that lives in Southwest China today, though not a direct ancestor. It's remarkable that a similarly-sized panda once roamed present-day Europe and researchers are just learning about the species.
SEE ALSO: The Fat Bear Week winner is the champion we all needed"The new species from Bulgaria is geologically the latest and the most evolved European species of panda," Spassov emphasized. This discovery provides ideas about the possible evolutionary paths of pandas and how their population dispersed over time, he added.
"I realized that I was holding in my hands the remains of a new species of fossil panda."
Spassov collaborated with his colleague Qigao Jiangzuo from China, and their findings were publishedin the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. They named the newly discovered species Agriarctos nikoloviin honor of the curator Ivan Nikolov who originally collected the fossilized teeth.
Want more science and tech news delivered straight to your inbox? Sign up for Mashable's Top Stories newsletter today.
The tooth fossils give clues about the ancient panda’s whereabouts and its diet, Spassov explained.
Coal deposits on the stained fossils suggest the ancient panda lived in swampy and humid forested regions, places where decomposed plants eventually (over millions of years) became coal.
The ancient panda tooth fossils also suggest their feeding habits were different from the iconic giant panda we see today in China. Today’s giant panda diet consists almost entirely of bamboo. But the European panda Nikolov unearthed did not fully rely on bamboo, the study found. That's because their teeth weren't powerful enough to constantly crush hard woody bamboo stems. The ancient pandas likely fed on softer plants, and they were largely vegetarians.
European pandas lived alongside carnivores, Spassov said. They competed with large predators like saber-toothed tigers, hyenas, and other bears that roamed during the Miocene period (between 23 and five million yearsago). Amid all this competition, species atop the food chain try to avoid competition by finding different diets. This struggle for finite calories likely drove the panda lineage towards vegetarianism, Spassov explained. "The competition was generally serious," he said.
These panda fossils are critical gap fillers. That means, until now, scientists had a less complete picture of the ancient bears that are closely related to the surviving panda species in China, Juan Abella, a paleontologist at Miquel Crusafont Catalan Institute of Paleontology in Spain, told Mashable. Abella was not part of the new study.
Abella published a similar studyin 2012 that described the oldest known ancestor of the giant panda clade that once wandered Spain, using fossils dated around 11.6 million years ago. The new species Spassov identified is definitely much more closely related to the surviving giant panda, he noted.
"Hopefully, we will be able to solve all these evolutive paths that lead towards the extant panda," Abella said.
文章
683
浏览
28475
获赞
749
Samsung is donating 2,000 glove
Samsung announced today that it will donate 2,000 devices to the U.K. National Health Service's NighFacebook's latest big hack was apparently by spammers, not foreign agents
Facebook's latest hack had the information of 29 million users scraped, but apparently by scammers wMicrosoft sends out press invites for Surface event on Oct. 2
The next few weeks are shaping up to be a gadget lover's dream.Apple will announce new iPhones and AEverything we know about the OnePlus 6T
OnePlus doesn't appear to be slowing down this year. It's full speed ahead with another new AndroidPlease Instagram, don't take away my mindless, time
It happened to me: I was a victim of Instagram's botched update. I woke up on Thursday and went throYouTube will now tell you how much of your life you spend watching videos
Google is worried about your digital health. More specifically, your addiction to watching hours upoMicrosoft says it can recover missing files following botched Windows 10 update
Microsoft abruptly paused the October 2018 Update of its Windows 10 operating system after reports tHands on with Sony's Xperia XZ3
Every Android phone maker at IFA 2018 seems to be shamelessly copying the iPhone X. Every company exAll the best signs from Women's March events around the country
The Women's March is back for its third year, and despite several layers of controversy surroundingYour Instagram account may have been compromised by hackers, too
You didn't forget that Facebook owns Instagram, did you?That little fact is extra germane today follHome DNA test results from 23andMe to help develop drugs
Pharmaceutical giant GlaxoSmithKline has invested $300 million into home DNA testing company 23andMeOne of the most popular Ethereum apps sure looks like a Ponzi scheme
They're not even trying to hide it anymore. One of the most popular apps built on the Ethereum blockYes, you can teach your cat to fetch
It's not just dogs who love the art of retrieval. Quite a few cat owners report that their feline frHere's when Apple's new watchOS and tvOS updates will be available
Apple just unveiled its latest lineup of iPhones and Apple Watches and, even if you don't plan on upMichelle Obama, Janelle Monáe, and more celebs launch voter registration campaign
Midterm elections are coming and Michelle Obama wants everybody to cast a ballot.The former FLOTUS i