"When dinosaurs died out, many ecological niches became vacant, and placental mammals took over," study lead author Mario dos Reis at University College London told Discovery News. "The placental ancestor diversified and evolved into the modern mammals we see today, such as rodents, deer, whales, horses, bats, carnivores, monkeys and ultimately humans. If dinosaurs had not died out, then placental mammals may not have had the opportunity to diversify the way they did, and our own species would not have evolved!" added dos Reis.
Researchers analysed 36 complete mammal genomes together with information from the mammal fossil record. The results determined placental mammals originated in the Cretaceous period.
Dos Reis explained that the DNA of organisms accumulates changes, called mutations, at a constant rate in time. This is referred to as the "molecular clock". For example, certain DNA in humans and other apes mutates at a pace of about 1% every 10 million years. Researchers estimated the number of mutations that accumulated in each mammal lineage, corrected for the flaky clock, and together with ages from known fossils estimated the age of the placental ancestor.
The study is published in the journal Biology Letters.
via Science - Google News http://ift.tt/1apRRba

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