Worth noting that Gastornithidae don't appear right away after K/T, they appear about 2/3 of the way thru the Paleocene. This doesn't appear to be any more of a head start over mammals since bigger herbivores like Coryphodon also appear at that time. But most of these mammalian herbivores would occupy a different niche than a herbivorous Gastornis (if we presume it to have been on a seed- or nut-crushing diet) TY From: dinosaur-l-request@usc.edu <dinosaur-l-request@usc.edu> on behalf of Ronald Orenstein <ron.orenstein@rogers.com>
Sent: Friday, October 13, 2017 8:02 PM To: John Bois Cc: Tim Williams; dinosaur-l@usc.edu Subject: Re: [dinosaur] Evolution of giant flightless birds (free pdf) I have always assumed that one of the reasons for the evolution of at least some large flightless birds was lack of competition from mammals. This seems highly likely for moas, elephant-birds, giant flightless Hawaiian geese, large flightless galliforms
on New Caledonia and Fiji, dodos etc. it may be have been less of a factor for large birds on continents, but I wonder if the evolution of large size early giant birds such as Gastornis might have been facilitated by a depauperate mammal fauna after the C-T?
Ronald Orenstein 1825 Shady Creek Court
Mississauga, ON
Canada L5L 3W2
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