Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
science/biology

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Insular dwarfism

Form of phyletic dwarfism occurring on islands

Insular dwarfism

Summary

Form of phyletic dwarfism occurring on islands

abbr=on}}. Females were smaller.

Insular dwarfism, a form of phyletic dwarfism, is the process and condition of large animals evolving or having a reduced body size{{refn | An example of noninsular phyletic dwarfism is the evolution of the dwarfed marmosets and tamarins among New World monkeys, culminating in the appearance of the smallest example, Cebuella pygmaea.{{Cite journal |doi-access= free

Possible causes

Structure of insular dwarfism web

There are several proposed explanations for the mechanism which produces such dwarfism.

One is a selective process where only smaller animals trapped on the island survive, as food periodically declines to a borderline level. The smaller animals need fewer resources and smaller territories, and so are more likely to get past the break-point where population decline allows food sources to replenish enough for the survivors to flourish. Smaller size is also advantageous from a reproductive standpoint, as it entails shorter gestation periods and generation times.

In the tropics, small size should make thermoregulation easier.

Among herbivores, large size confers advantages in coping with both competitors and predators, so a reduction or absence of either would facilitate dwarfing; competition appears to be the more important factor.

Among carnivores, the main factor is thought to be the size and availability of prey resources, and competition is believed to be less important. In tiger snakes, insular dwarfism occurs on islands where available prey is restricted to smaller sizes than are normally taken by mainland snakes. Since prey size preference in snakes is generally proportional to body size, small snakes may be better adapted to take small prey.

Differences of dwarfism and gigantism

The inverse process, wherein small animals breeding on isolated islands lacking the predators of large land masses may become much larger than normal, is called island gigantism. An excellent example is the dodo, the ancestors of which were normal-sized pigeons. There are also several species of giant rats, one still extant, that coexisted with both Homo floresiensis and the dwarf stegodonts on Flores.

The process of insular dwarfing can occur relatively rapidly by evolutionary standards. This is in contrast to increases in maximum body size, which are much more gradual. When normalized to generation length, the maximum rate of body mass decrease during insular dwarfing was found to be over 30 times greater than the maximum rate of body mass increase for a ten-fold change in mammals.{{cite journal

Factors influencing the extent of dwarfing

For both herbivores and carnivores, island size, the degree of island isolation and the size of the ancestral continental species appear not to be of major direct importance to the degree of dwarfing. However, when considering only the body masses of recent top herbivores and carnivores, and including data from both continental and island land masses, the body masses of the largest species in a land mass were found to scale to the size of the land mass, with slopes of about 0.5 log(body mass/kg) per log(land area/km2).{{cite journal

It has been suggested that for dwarf elephants, competition was an important factor in body size, with islands with competing herbivores having significantly larger dwarf elephants than those where competing herbivores were absent.

Examples

Non-avian dinosaurs

Recognition that insular dwarfism could apply to dinosaurs arose through the work of Ferenc Nopcsa, a Hungarian-born aristocrat, adventurer, scholar, and paleontologist. Nopcsa studied Transylvanian dinosaurs intensively, noticing that they were smaller than their cousins elsewhere in the world. For example, he unearthed six-meter-long sauropods, a group of dinosaurs which elsewhere commonly grew to 30 meters or more. Nopcsa deduced that the area where the remains were found was an island, Hațeg Island (now the Haţeg or Hatzeg basin in Romania) during the Mesozoic era.{{Cite web | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100225003941/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/dinosaurs/7291186/Dwarf-dinosaur-island-really-did-exist-scientists-claim.html | archive-date = 2010-02-25 | access-date = 2010-02-26}} Nopcsa's proposal of dinosaur dwarfism on Hațeg Island is today widely accepted after further research confirmed that the remains found are not from juveniles.

Sauropods

ExampleSpeciesRangeTime frameContinental relative
[[File:AmpelosaurusScale.png120px]]
AmpelosaurusA. atacisIbero-Armorican IslandLate Cretaceous / Maastrichtian[[File:Tapuiasaurus_NT.jpg120px]]
Nemegtosaurids
[[File:Europasaurus_skull.JPG120px]]
EuropasaurusE. holgeriLower SaxonyLate Jurassic / Middle Kimmeridgian[[File:Giraffatitan_scale.png120px]]
Brachiosaurs
[[File:Magyarosaurus-_human_size.JPG120px]]
MagyarosaurusM. dacusHațeg IslandLate Cretaceous / Maastrichtian[[File:Rapetosaurus_BW.jpg120px]]
Rapetosaurus
[[File:Lirainosaurus.jpg120px]]
LirainosaurusL. astibiaeIbero-Armorican IslandLate Cretaceous
[[File:Paludititan_nalatzsensis.jpg120px]]
PaludititanP. nalatzensisHațeg IslandLate Cretaceous / Maastrichtian[[File:Epachtosaurus_sciuttoi.jpg120px]]
Epachthosaurus

Other

ExampleSpeciesRangeTime frameContinental relative
[[File:Langenburg_theropod_size.png120px]]
Langenberg Quarry
torvosaur (blue)UnnamedLower SaxonyLate Jurassic / Middle Kimmeridgian[[File:Torvosaurus_gurneyi.png120px]]
Torvosaurus
[[File:Struthiosaurus austriacus size.png120x120px]]
StruthiosaurusS. austriacusIbero-Armorican, Australoalpine, and Hațeg IslandsLate Cretaceous[[File:Edmontonia_Scale.svg120px]]
Edmontonia
S. transylvanicus
S. languedocensis
[[File:Telmatosaurus_Scale.svg120px]]
TelmatosaurusT. transsylvanicusHațeg Island[[File:Hadrosaurus_Scale.svg120px]]
Hadrosaurids
[[File:Thecodontosaurus_Scale.svg120px]]
ThecodontosaurusT. antiquusSouthern EnglandLate Triassic / Rhaetian[[File:Human-plateosaurus_size_comparison.svg120px]]
Plateosaurs
[[File:Iguanodontian Sizes.svg120px]]
Zalmoxes (purple)Z. robustusHațeg IslandLate Cretaceous[[File:Perot_Museum_Tenontosaurus.jpg120px]]
Tenontosaurus
Z. shqiperorum

In addition, the genus Balaur was initially described as a Velociraptor-sized dromaeosaurid (and in consequence a dubious example of insular dwarfism), but has been since reclassified as a secondarily flightless stem bird, closer to modern birds than Jeholornis (thus actually an example of insular gigantism).

Birds

ExampleBinomial nameNative rangeStatusContinental relativeInsular / mainland
length or mass ratio
[[File:Apteribis_sp._(5212794163).jpg120px]]
Hawaiian flightless ibisesApteribis glenosMolokaiExtinct (Late Quaternary)[[File:White_Ibis_in_Florida.jpg120px]]
American ibises
Apteribis brevisMaui
Cozumel curassowCrax rubra griscomiCozumelUnknown[[File:Crax_rubra_(Great_Curassow)_-_female.jpg120px]]
Great curassow
[[File:Baudin emus.jpg120px]]
Kangaroo Island emuDromaius novaehollandiae baudinianusKangaroo Island, South AustraliaExtinct (c. AD 1827)[[File:Emu_RWD1.jpg120px]]
Emu
[[File:Emu_size.png120px]]
King Island emu (black)Dromaius novaehollandiae minorKing Island, TasmaniaExtinct (AD 1822)LR ≈ 0.48
Dwarf yellow eyed penguinMegadyptes antipodes richdaleiChatham Islands, New ZealandExtinct (after 1300 AD)[[File:Megadyptes_antipodes_-Otago_Peninsula,_Dunedin,_New_Zealand_-family-8.jpg120px]]
Yellow-eyed penguin
[[File:Naturalis_Biodiversity_Center_-_RMNH.AVES.128765_2_-_Toxostoma_guttatum_(Ridgway,_1885)_-_Mimidae_-_bird_skin_specimen.jpeg120px]]
Cozumel thrasherToxostoma gluttatumCozumelCritically endangered[[File:Curve-billed_Thrasher.jpg120px]]
Other thrashers

[[Squamates]]

ExampleBinomial nameNative rangeStatusContinental relativeInsular / mainland
length or mass ratio
[[File:20150510-IMG_0786.jpg120px]]
Madagascar dwarf chameleonBrookesia minimaNosy Be island, MadagascarEndangered[[File:Brookesia_species_male_female_(Journal.pone.0031314.g010).png120px]]
Madagascar leaf chameleons
[[File:Brookesia micra on a match head.jpg120px]]
Nosy Hara chameleon{{cite journalfirst = F.author2=Köhler, J.author3=Townsend, T. M.author4=Vences, M.title = Rivaling the World's Smallest Reptiles: Discovery of Miniaturized and Microendemic New Species of Leaf Chameleons (Brookesia) from Northern Madagascarvolume = 7issue = 2article-number = e31314date = 2012-02-14doi =10.1371/journal.pone.0031314
last=Keoghfirst=J. S.author2=Scott, I. A. W.author3=Hayes, C.date=January 2005title=Rapid and repeated origin of insular gigantism and dwarfism in Australian tiger snakesjournal=Evolutionvolume=59issue=1pages=226–233doi=10.1111/j.0014-3820.2005.tb00909.xpmid=15792242s2cid=58524doi-access=free}}Notechis scutatusRoxby Island, South AustraliaUnknown[[File:Tiger_snake_2.jpg120px]]
Tiger snake
Dwarf Burmese pythonPython bivittatus progschaiJava, Bali, Sumbawa and Sulawesi, Indonesia[[File:Burmese_python_(6887388927).jpg120px]]
Burmese pythonLR ≈ 0.44
Tanahjampea reticulated python{{cite journalfirst = M.author2=Mausfeld, P.author3=Schmitz, A.author4=Böhme, W.title = Review of the reticulated python (Python reticulatus Schneider, 1801) with the description of new subspecies from Indonesiavolume = 89issue = 5pages = 201–213date = 2002-04-09pmid = 12135085bibcode = 2002NW.....89..201As2cid = 4368895 }}

Mammals

[[Pilosans of the Caribbean|Pilosans]]

ExampleBinomial nameNative rangeStatusContinental relative
[[File:Bradypus_pygmaeus.jpg120px]]
Pygmy three-toed slothBradypus pygmaeusIsla Escudo de Veraguas, PanamaCritically endangered[[File:Bradypus variegatus, the Brown-throated Three-toed Sloth (12687597105).jpg120px]]
Brown-throated sloth
[[File:Habanocnus.JPG120px]]
AcratocnusA. antillensisCuba, Hispaniola and Puerto RicoExtinct (c. 3000 BC)[[File:Megalonyx_size.svg120px]]
Continental ground sloths
A. odontrigonus
A. ye
ImagocnusI. zazaeCubaExtinct (Early Miocene)
[[File:Megalocnus.jpg120px]]
MegalocnusM. rodensCuba and HispaniolaExtinct (c. 2700 BC)
M. zile
[[File:Synocnus_comes.jpg120px]]
NeocnusNeocnus spp.Extinct (c. 3000 BC)

[[Proboscidean]]s

Main article: Dwarf elephant

ExampleBinomial nameNative rangeStatusContinental relative
Sulawesi dwarf elephantElephas celebensisSulawesiExtinct (Early Pleistocene)[[File:Indian-Elephant-444.jpg120px]]
Asian elephant
Cabarruyan dwarf elephantElephas beyeriLuzonExtinct
Cretan dwarf mammothMammuthus creticusCrete[[File:Mammuthus Size comparison.png120px]]
Mammuthus
[[File:M._exilis_skeletal.png120px]]
Channel Islands mammothMammuthus exilisSanta Rosae islandExtinct (Late Pleistocene)[[File:M. columbi skeletals.png120px]]
Columbian mammoth
[[File:Mammuthus_lamarmorai.png120px]]Mammuthus lamarmoraiSardinia[[File:Steppe mammoth size 2.jpg120px]]
Steppe mammoth
Saint Paul Island woolly mammothMammuthus primigeniusSaint Paul Island, AlaskaExtinct (c. 3750 BC)[[File:M._primigenius.png120px]]
Woolly mammoth
[[File:Elephas_skeleton.JPG120px]]
Siculo-Maltese elephantsPalaeoloxodon antiquus leonardiSicily and MaltaExtinct[[File:Palaeoloxodon-Species-Scale-Diagram-SVG-Steveoc86.svg150px]]
Straight-tusked elephant
(left)
P. mnaidriensis
P. melitensis
P. falconeri
Cretan elephantsPalaeoloxodon chaniensis
Crete
P. creutzburgi
[[File:Elephas_cypriotes_Tusk_and_Molar.jpg120px]]
Cyprus dwarf elephantPalaeoloxodon cypriotesCyprusExtinct (c. 9000 BC)
Naxos dwarf elephantPalaeoloxodon sp.NaxosExtinct
Tilos dwarf elephantPalaeoloxodon tiliensisTilos
Rhodes dwarf elephantPalaeoloxodon sp.Rhodes
Bumiayu dwarf sinomastodontSinomastodon bumiajuensisBumiayu Island (now part of Java)Extinct (Early Pleistocene)[[File:Sinomastodon.png120px]]
Sinomastodon
[[File:のんほいパーク - アケボノゾウ.jpg120px]]
Japanese stegodont{{cite journalfirst = P. Y.author2=A.A.E. van der Geertitle = Evolution and Extinction of Plio-Pleistocene Island Ungulatesvolume = 2pages = 241–256
Stegodon protoaurorae
Stegodon aurorae
last1=Van Den Berghfirst1=Gerrit Dirklast2=Awefirst2=Rokhus Duelast3=Morwoodfirst3=Michael Johnauthor-link3=Mike Morwoodlast4=Sutiknafirst4=Thomasauthor5=Jatmikoauthor6=Wahyu Saptomo, E.date=May 2008title=The youngest Stegodon remains in Southeast Asia from the Late Pleistocene archaeological site Liang Bua, Flores, Indonesiajournal=Quaternary Internationalvolume=182issue=1pages=16–48bibcode=2008QuInt.182...16Vdoi=10.1016/j.quaint.2007.02.001}}Stegodon florensisFloresExtinct (Late Pleistocene)[[File:Stegodon’s_ivory_displayed_at_Philippine_National_Museum.jpg120px]]
Sundaland Stegodon
Javan dwarf stegodontsStegodon hypsilophus{{cite journalfirst = F.author2=van den Bergh, G. D.title = A dwarf Stegodon from Sambungmacan (Central Java, Indonesia)
S. semedoensis
S. sp.
editor1-last= Fleagleeditor1-first= J. Geditor2-first= J. J.editor3-last= Grineeditor3-first= F. E.editor4-first= A. L.editor5-last= Leakeyeditor5-first= R. E.title= Out of Africa I: The First Hominin Colonization of Eurasiaurl= https://books.google.com/books?id=CO5zfl460CEC
Sulawesi dwarf stegodontStegodon sompoensisSulawesiExtinct
Lesser Flores dwarf stegodontStegodon sondaariFloresExtinct (Middle Pleistocene)
Sumba dwarf stegodontStegodon sumbaensisSumba, Indonesia
Timor dwarf stegodontStegodon timorensisTimorExtinct
last1= Saegusafirst1= H.title= Dwarf Stegolophodon from the Miocene of Japan: Passengers on sinking boatsjournal= Quaternary Internationalvolume= 182issue= 1year= 2008pages= 49–62doi= 10.1016/j.quaint.2007.08.001bibcode= 2008QuInt.182...49S}}Stegolophodon pseudolatidensJapanExtinct (Miocene)[[File:Stegolophodon_latidens.JPG120px]]
Stegolophodon

[[Primates]]

ExampleBinomial nameNative rangeStatusContinental relative
Nosy Hara dwarf lemurCheirogaleus sp.Nosy Hara island off MadagascarUnknown[[File:Cheirogaleus-medius.jpg120px]]
Dwarf lemurs
[[File:Specimen_LB1.jpg120px]]
Flores ManHomo floresiensisFloresExtinct (Late Pleistocene)[[File:Homme_de_Tautavel_01-08.jpg100px]]
Homo erectus
[[File:LuzonensisMolars.jpg120px]]
Callao Manlast1= Wadefirst1= L.title= New species of ancient human unearthed in the Philippinesjournal= Sciencevolume= 364date= 2019-04-10doi= 10.1126/science.aax6501s2cid= 189045520}}Luzon, Philippines
Modern pygmies of FloresHomo sapiensFloresExtantother members of Homo sapiens
Early Palau modern humans (disputed)PalauExtinct (?)
AndamaneseAndaman IslandsExtant
[[File:Macaca_majori.JPG120px]]
Sardinian macaqueMacaca majoriSardiniaExtinct (Pleistocene)[[File:Barbary_macaques_of_Gibraltar_in_search_of_food.jpg120px]]
Barbary macaque
[[File:Red_Colobus_7.jpg120px]]
Zanzibar red colobusPiliocolobus kirkiiUngujaEndangered[[File:Udzungwa_Red_Colobus_Stevage.JPG120px]]
Udzungwa red colobus

[[Carnivorans]]

ExampleBinomial nameNative rangeStatusContinental relativeInsular / mainland
length or mass ratio
[[File:Canis_lupus_cristaldii_subsp._nov.png120px]]
Sicilian wolfCanis lupus cristaldiiSicilyExtinct (AD 1970)[[File:Canis_lupus_Europe.jpg120px]]
Gray wolf
[[File:Honshu-wolf4.jpg120px]]
Japanese wolfCanis lupus hodophilaxJapan (excluding Hokkaido)Extinct (AD 1905)
[[File:Adaptations_of_the_Pleistocene_island_canid_Cynotherium_sardous_(2006)_Fig._1.png120px]]
Sardinian dhole
(forward)Cynotherium sardousCorsica and SardiniaExtinct (c. 8300 BC)[[File:Xenocyon_lycanoides_restoration.jpg120px]]
Xenocyon
Trinil dogMececyon trinilensisJavaExtinct (Pleistocene)
last1= Cuarónfirst1=A. D.last2= Martínez-Moralesfirst2= M. A.last3= McFaddenfirst3= K. W.last4= Valenzuelafirst4= D.last5= Gompperfirst5=M. E.title= The status of dwarf carnivores on Cozumel Island, Mexicojournal= Biodiversity and Conservationvolume= 13issue= 2pages= 317–331date = 2004doi= 10.1023/b:bioc.0000006501.80472.ccbibcode=2004BiCon..13..317Cciteseerx=10.1.1.511.2040s2cid=25730672}}Nasua narica nelsoniCozumelCritically endangered[[File:White_nosed_Coati.jpg120px]]
Yucatan white-nosed coati
[[File:Zanzibar_Leopard_2.JPG120px]]
Zanzibar leopardPanthera pardus pardusUngujaCritically endangered or Extinct[[File:Male_leopard_samburu_2,_crop.jpg120px]]
African leopard
[[File:Bali_tiger_zanveld.jpg120px]]
Bali tigerPanthera tigris sondaicaBaliExtinct (c. AD 1940)[[File:Panthera_tigris_sumatrae_(Sumatran_Tiger)_close-up.jpg120px]]
Sumatran tiger
[[File:Panthera_tigris_sondaica_01.jpg120px]]
Javan tigerJavaExtinct (c. AD 1975)
[[File:Cozumel_Raccoon2.jpg120px]]
Cozumel raccoonProcyon pygmaeusCozumelCritically endangered[[File:Raccoon-10.png120px]]
Common raccoon
[[File:Urocyon littoralis pair.jpg120px]]
Island foxUrocyon littoralisSix of the Channel Islands of CaliforniaNear Threatened[[File:Grey_Fox_(Urocyon_cinereoargenteus).jpg120px]]
Gray foxLR ≈ 0.84
LR ≈ 0.75
Cozumel foxUrocyon sp.CozumelCritically endangered or Extinct

Non-ruminant [[ungulate]]s

ExampleBinomial nameNative rangeStatusContinental relative
[[File:Eumaiochoerus etruscus mandible.jpg120px]]
EumaiochoerusEumaiochoerus etruscusBaccinello, MontebamboliExtinct (Miocene)[[File:Microstonyx skull.jpg120px]]
Microstonyx
[[File:Hippo1_final.jpg120px]]
Malagasy dwarf hippopotamusesHippopotamus laloumenaMadagascarExtinct (c. AD 1000)[[File:Nijlpaard.jpg120px]]
Common hippopotamus
H. lemerlei
H. madagascariensis
Bumiayu dwarf hippopotamusHexaprotodon simplexBumiayu Island (now Java)Extinct (Early Pleistocene)[[File:Hexaprotodon_sivalensis.jpg120px]]
Asian hippopotamuses
[[File:Hippopotamus_cruetzburgi.JPG120px]]
Cretan dwarf hippopotamusHippopotamus creutzburgiCreteExtinct (Middle Pleistocene)[[File:Museo_di_paleologia,_scheletro_di_hippopotamus_antiquus,_recuperato_presso_figline_valdarno.JPG120px]]
Hippopotamus antiquus
[[File:Hippopotamus_amphibius_Linn_at_Ghar_Dalam,_Malta.png120px]]
Maltese dwarf hippopotamusHippopotamus melitensisMaltaExtinct (Pleistocene)[[File:Nijlpaard.jpg120px]]
Common hippopotamus (H. amphibius)
[[File:Hippopotamus_pentlandi_3.JPG120px]]
Sicilian dwarf hippopotamusHippopotamus pentlandiSicily
[[File:Hippo-Cyprus.JPG120px]]
Cyprus dwarf hippopotamusHippopotamus minorCyprusExtinct (c. 8000 BC)Unclear, either H. amphibius or H. antiquus.
Cozumel collared peccaryPecari tajacu nanusCozumelUnknown[[File:Running_Javelina.jpg120px]]
Collared peccary

[[Bovid]]s

ExampleBinomial nameNative rangeStatusContinental relative
Sicilian bisonBison priscus siciliaeSicilyExtinct (Late Pleistocene)[[File:Prazubr_rysunek_600.jpg120px]]
Steppe bison
last=van Vuurefirst= Cistitle= Retracing the Aurochs: History, Morphology and Ecology of an Extinct Wild Oxurl= https://books.google.com/books?id=cyFFAAAAYAAJ&q=Sicilyyear= 2005publisher= Coronet Books Incorporatedisbn= 978-954-642-235-4oclc= 472741798}}Bos primigenius siciliae[[File:Aurochs_reconstruction.jpg120px]]
Eurasian aurochs
Cebu tamarawBubalus cebuensisCebu, PhilippinesExtinct[[File:Indian Water Buffalo Bubalus arnee by Dr Raju Kasambe IMG 0347 (11) (cropped).jpg120px]]
Wild water buffalo
[[File:Lowland anoa.jpg120px]]
Lowland anoaBubalus depressicornisSulawesi and Buton, IndonesiaEndangered
Bubalus grovesiBubalus grovesiSulawesi, IndonesiaExtinct
[[File:Bubalus_mindorensis_by_Gregg_Yan_01.jpg120px]]
TamarawBubalus mindorensisMindoro, PhilippinesCritically endangered
[[File:Buablus_quarlesi2.jpg120px]]
Mountain anoaBubalus quarlesiSulawesi and Buton, IndonesiaEndangered
[[File:Myotragus_balearicus.JPG120px]]
Balearic Islands cave goatMyotragus balearicusMajorca and MenorcaExtinct (after 3000 BC)Gallogoral
last1=van der Geerfirst1= A.last2= Lyrasfirst2= Glast3= de Vosfirst3= J.last4= Dermitzakisfirst4= M.title=Evolution of Island Mammals: Adaptation and Extinction of Placental Mammals on Islandschapter= Sardinia and Corsicaurl= https://books.google.com/books?id=JmSsNuwMAxgCchapter-url= https://books.google.com/books?id=JmSsNuwMAxgC&q=Chapter+Nine+Sardiniadate=14 February 2011publisher= John Wiley & Sonsisbn= 978-1-4443-9128-2oclc= 894698082}}Nesogoral spp.SardiniaExtinct
doi = 10.1111/bij.12239title = Just another island dwarf? Phenotypic distinctiveness in the poorly known Soemmerring's Gazelle, Nanger soemmerringii (Cetartiodactyla: Bovidae), of Dahlak Kebir Islandjournal = Biological Journal of the Linnean Societyvolume = 111issue = 3pages = 603–620year = 2014last1 = Chiozzifirst1 = G.last2 = Bardellifirst2 = G.last3 = Riccifirst3 = M.last4 = De Marchifirst4 = G.last5 = Cardinifirst5 = A.doi-access = freehdl = 11380/1061537hdl-access = free }}Nanger soemmerringi ssp.Dahlak Kebir island, EritreaVulnerable[[File:The book of antelopes (1894) Gazella soemmerringi (white background).png120px]]
Soemmerring's gazelle
[[File:Tyrrhenotragus gracillimus mandible.jpg120px]]
TyrrhenotragusTyrrhenotragus gracillimusBaccinelloExtinctAntilopinae sp.

[[Cervid]]s and relatives

ExampleBinomial nameNative rangeStatusContinental relative
[[File:Candiacervus_ropalophorus.jpg120px]]
Cretan deerCandiacervus spp.CreteExtinct (Pleistocene)Unknown
[[File:Praemegaceros_cazioti_A6_digital.jpg150px]]
Sardinian deerPraemegaceros caziotiSardiniaExtinct (c. 5500 BC)Praemegaceros
[[File:Cervus astylodon.jpg120px]]
Ryukyu dwarf deerCervus astylodonRyukyu IslandsExtinct[[File:The_deer_of_all_lands_(1898)_Manchurian_sika_white_background.png120px]]
Sika deer (?)
Cervus praenipponicus (?)
Jersey red deer population{{Cite journalfirst = A. M.title = Rapid dwarfing of red deer on Jersey in the Last InterglacialNature]]volume = 342issue = 6249pages = 539–542date = 1989-11-30pmid = 2685610bibcode = 1989Natur.342..539Ls2cid = 4343091 }}
[[File:CervusElaphusCorsicanus-pjt.jpg120px]]
Corsican red deerCervus elaphus corsicanusCorsica and SardiniaNear Threatened
Sicilian red deerCervus siciliaeSicilyExtinct (Late Pleistocene)
[[File:Hoplitomeryx_matthei.jpg120px]]
HoplitomeryxHoplitomeryx spp.Gargano IslandExtinct (Early Pliocene)[[File:Antilocapra_americana_male_(Wyoming,_2012).jpg120px]]
Pecorans
Sicilian fallow deerDama carburangelensisSicilyExtinct (Late Pleistocene)Fallow deer
[[File:Key_deer_male.jpg120px]]
Florida Key deerOdocoileus virginianus claviumFlorida KeysEndangered[[File:White-tailed_deer.jpg120px]]
Virginia deer
[[File:Spitsbergen_reindeer01.jpg120px]]
Svalbard reindeerRangifer tarandus platyrhynchusSvalbardVulnerable[[File:Fjellrein.jpg120px]]
Reindeer
[[File:Rusa_marianna_by_Gregg_Yan.jpg120px]]
Philippine deerRusa mariannaPhilippines[[File:Sambar (Rusa unicolor cambojensis) (7109798353).jpg120px]]
Sambar deer

[[Plant]]s

Possible exampleBinomial nameNative rangeStatusContinental relative
[[File:El Tecolote.JPG120px]]
Insular elephant cactiPachycereus pringleiRemote islands in the Sea of Cortez (e.g. Santa Cruz, San Pedro Mártir)Not evaluated[[File:Pachycereus_pringlei_cardon_sahueso.JPG120px]]
Mainland elephant cacti

Notes

References

References

  1. (Winter 1982). "Allometry and Paleoecology of Medial Miocene Dwarf Rhinoceroses from the Texas Gulf Coastal Plain". [[Paleobiology (journal).
  2. (August 2006). "The island rule in large mammals: paleontology meets ecology". [[Evolution (journal).
  3. (August 2016). "The effect of area and isolation on insular dwarf proboscideans". Journal of Biogeography.
  4. (2010-01-28). "Dinosaurs and the island rule: The dwarfed dinosaurs from Haţeg Island". [[Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology]].
  5. (2011-09-20). "The Dinosaur Baron of Transylvania". Scientific American.
  6. (2010). "Bone histology of the titanosaur ''Lirainosaurus astibiae'' (Dinosauria: Sauropoda) from the Latest Cretaceous of Spain". Naturwissenschaften.
  7. Carpenter, K. (2001) ''The Armored Dinosaurs.'' Indiana University Press, 526 pages.
  8. Parker S (1984) The extinct Kangaroo Island Emu, a hitherto-unrecognised species. [[Bulletin of the British Ornithologists' Club]] 104: 19–22.
  9. (2011). "Ancient DNA Suggests Dwarf and 'Giant' Emu Are Conspecific". [[PLoS ONE]].
  10. Cole, Theresa L., et al. "Mitogenomes uncover extinct penguin taxa and reveal island formation as a key driver of speciation." Molecular biology and evolution 36.4 (2019): 784-797.
  11. Keogh, J. S.. (January 2005). "Rapid and repeated origin of insular gigantism and dwarfism in Australian tiger snakes". [[Evolution (journal).
  12. de Lang R, Vogel G (2005). ''The Snakes of Sulawesi: A Field Guide to the Land Snakes of Sulawesi with Identification Keys''. Frankfurt Contributions to Natural History Band 25, Edition Chimaira 2005. {{ISBN. 3-930612-85-2. pp. 23–27, 198–201.
  13. (2012). "The Corrected Lengths of Two Well-known Giant Pythons and the Establishment of a New Maximum Length Record for Burmese Pythons, ''Python bivittatus''". Bulletin of the Chicago Herpetological Society.
  14. (1998). "The influence of sex and body size on food habits of a giant tropical snake, ''Python reticulatus ''". Functional Ecology.
  15. (2016). "The evolution of tail length in snakes associated with different gravitational environments". Functional Ecology.
  16. Schirber, Michael. ''[http://www.livescience.com/14-surviving-extinction-woolly-mammoths-endured.html Surviving Extinction: Where Woolly Mammoths Endured]''. Live Science. Imaginova Corporation. Retrieved 2007-07-20.
  17. The mammoths of [[Wrangel Island]], north of [[Siberia]], are no longer considered dwarfs. See: Tikhonov, Alexei; Larry Agenbroad; Sergey Vartanyan (2003). ''[http://natuurtijdschriften.nl/search?identifier=538695 Comparative analysis of the mammoth populations on Wrangel Island and the Channel Islands]''. DEINSEA 9: 415–420. ISSN 0923-9308
  18. (2010-03-10). "A new species of Stegodon (Mammalia, Proboscidea) from the Kazusa Group (lower Pleistocene), Hachioji City, Tokyo, Japan and its evolutionary morphodynamics: STEGODON PROTOAURORAE SP. NOV. AND MORPHODYNAMICS". Palaeontology.
  19. (25 September 2000). "The Late Quaternary palaeogeography of mammal evolution in the Indonesian Archipelago". Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology.
  20. (May 2008). "The youngest ''Stegodon'' remains in Southeast Asia from the Late Pleistocene archaeological site Liang Bua, Flores, Indonesia". [[Quaternary International]].
  21. Siswanto, S., & Noerwidi, S. (2014). PROBOSCIDEA FOSSIL FROM SEMEDO SITE: Its Correlation With Biostratigraphy and Human Arrival in Java. Berkala Arkeologi, 34(2).
  22. "Fossils of Stegodon and Varanus komodoensis Sumba and Flores: a Pleistocene landbridge". Faculty of Science, Medicine and Health.
  23. (2008). "Dwarf ''Stegolophodon'' from the Miocene of Japan: Passengers on sinking boats". Quaternary International.
  24. "New group of dwarf lemurs may be world's rarest primate".
  25. [http://www.abc.net.au/science/articles/2004/12/17/1266916.htm Scientist to study Hobbit morphing], abc.net.au
  26. (2019-04-10). "New species of ancient human unearthed in the Philippines". Science.
  27. (2019). "A new species of ''Homo'' from the Late Pleistocene of the Philippines". Nature.
  28. Tucci, S.. (2018-08-03). "Evolutionary history and adaptation of a human pygmy population of Flores Island, Indonesia". Science.
  29. "[https://web.archive.org/web/20080901182323/http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2008/08/080827-palau-humans.html Ancient Small People on Palau Not Dwarfs, Study Says]". ''National Geographic News''. August 27, 2008.
  30. (2016). "Genomic analysis of Andamanese provides insights into ancient human migration into Asia and adaptation". Nature Genetics.
  31. Rook, L.. (2008-12-31). "The first workshop on European fossil primate record (Siena and Grosseto, September 11-13, 2008) with an update on Italian studies in Paleoprimatology". Atti Muss. Stor. Nat. Maremma.
  32. (2004). "The status of dwarf carnivores on Cozumel Island, Mexico". Biodiversity and Conservation.
  33. (22 April 2020). "The uplifting tale of these tiny island foxes, nearly wiped out by disaster". [[National Geographic]].
  34. (1995). "Mammalian Species – ''Urocyon littoralis''".
  35. van Vuure, Cis. (2005). "Retracing the Aurochs: History, Morphology and Ecology of an Extinct Wild Ox". Coronet Books Incorporated.
  36. (14 February 2011). "Evolution of Island Mammals: Adaptation and Extinction of Placental Mammals on Islands". John Wiley & Sons.
  37. (2014). "Just another island dwarf? Phenotypic distinctiveness in the poorly known Soemmerring's Gazelle, ''Nanger soemmerringii'' (Cetartiodactyla: Bovidae), of Dahlak Kebir Island". Biological Journal of the Linnean Society.
  38. (2018). "Uniformity in variety: Antler morphology and evolution in a predator-free environment". Palaeontologia Electronica.
  39. (15 February 2015). "Emergence and Diversity of Modern Human Behavior in Paleolithic Asia". Texas A&M University Press.
  40. (2015). "Hoplitomerycidae (Late Miocene, Italy), an Example of Giantism in Insular Ruminants". Journal of Mammalian Evolution.
  41. (30 September 2010). "Dwarf Giants, Guano, and Isolation: Vegetation and Floristic Diversity of San Pedro Mártir Island, Gulf of California, Mexico". Proceedings of the San Diego Society of Natural History.
  42. Burns, K.C.. (May 2019). "Evolution in Isolation: The Search for an Island Syndrome in Plants". [[Cambridge University Press]].
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Insular dwarfism — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report