Wild Things:
Life as We Know It
Bats' barotrauma, fallow deer, Tahitian vanilla, lucky dinosaurs
- By T.A. Frail, Megan Gambino, Jesse Rhodes, Abigail Tucker and Sarah Zielinski
- Smithsonian magazine, November 2008

Effigia was an archosaur that lived in what is now New Mexico. (Raul Martin / National Geographic Image Collection)
Dinosaurs ruled the world for 160 million years because they outcompeted other species, right? Maybe not. A University of Bristol (England) study contends that rival crurotarsans—giant reptiles that were the ancestors of today's crocodiles—had a wider range of body types and were likely adapted to more landscapes than dinosaurs. But crurotarsan ranks were reduced 200 million years ago by climate change that harmed the underdog dinosaurs less, allowing them to take over.
Additional Sources
"Neotropical roots of a Polynesian spice: the hybrid origin of Tahitian vanilla, Vanilla tahitensis (Orchidaceae)," Pesach Lubinsky et al., American Journal of Botany, August 2008
"Superiority, Competition, and Opportunism in the Evolutionary Radiation of Dinosaurs," Stephen L. Brusatte et al., Science, September 12, 2008
"Barotrauma is a significant cause of bat fatalities at wind turbines," Erin F. Baerwald et al., Current Biology, August 26, 2008
"Low Frequency Groans Indicate Larger and More Dominant Fallow Deer (Dama dama) Males," Elisabetta Vannoni and Alan G. McElligott, PLoS One, September 2008
"Mirror-Induced Behavior in the Magpie (Pica pica): Evidence of Self-Recognition," Helmut Prior et al., PLoS Biology, August 2008










Comments (2)
Only the ones that get too near a wind farm die from barotrauma. The bats dying from the fungus is a different problem. You probably heard of this recently because a USGS scientist (see http://www.usgs.gov/newsroom/article.asp?ID=2058) identified the fungus and published the news a few weeks ago.
Posted by Sarah Zielinski on November 13,2008 | 02:23 PM
Are all bats dying from "barotrauma"? I had heard that it was a fungus killing them. We saw very few bats this past summer.
Posted by Ellen Hood on November 10,2008 | 06:47 PM