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Mesozoic mammaliaforms illuminate the origins of pelage coloration

Ruoshuang Li, Liliana D’Alba, Gerben Debruyn, Jessica L. Dobson, Chang‐Fu Zhou, Julia A. Clarke, Jakob Vinther, Q. Li, Matthew D. Shawkey

2025Science12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Pelage coloration, which serves numerous functions, is crucial to the evolution of behavior, physiology, and habitat preferences of mammals. However, little is known about the coloration of Mesozoic mammaliaforms that coevolved with dinosaurs. In this study, we used a dataset of melanosome (melanin-containing organelle) morphology and quantitatively measured hair colors from 116 extant mammals to reliably reconstruct the coloration of six Mesozoic mammaliaforms, including a previously undescribed euharamiyidan. Unlike the highly diverse melanosomes discovered in feathered dinosaurs, hairs in six mammaliaforms of different lineages and diverse ecomorphotypes showed uniform melanosome geometry, corresponding to dark-brown coloration consistent with crypsis and nocturnality. Our results suggest that the melanosome variation and color expansion seen in extant mammals may have occurred during their rapid radiation and diversification after the Cretaceous-Paleogene extinction.

Topics & Concepts

CrypsisMelanosomeExtant taxonBiologyMesozoicAdaptive radiationCretaceousZoologyEvolutionary biologyExtinction (optical mineralogy)PaleontologyMelaninPhylogeneticsPredationGeneBiochemistryStructural basinGeneticsEvolution and Paleontology StudiesAmphibian and Reptile BiologyAnimal Behavior and Reproduction
Mesozoic mammaliaforms illuminate the origins of pelage coloration | Litcius