Early giant reveals faster evolution of large body size in ichthyosaurs than in cetaceans
P. Martin Sander, Eva Maria Griebeler, Nicole Klein, Jorge Vélez‐Juarbe, Tanja Wintrich, Liam J. Revell, Lars Schmitz
Abstract
Early marine giant The largest animals to have ever lived occupied the marine environment. Modern cetaceans evolved their large size over tens of millions of years in response to the increased productivity of cold marine waters. However, whales were not the first marine giants to evolve. Sander et al . describe a 244-million-year-old fossil ichthyosaur that would have rivaled modern cetaceans in size (see the Perspective by Delsett and Pyenson). The animal existed at most 8 million years after the emergence of the first ichthyosaurs, suggesting a much more rapid size expansion that may have been fueled by processes after the Permian mass extinction. —SNV