So that's why dinosaurs were bad-tempered... scientists reveal they were plagued by lice

By DAVID DERBYSHIRE

Itching for a fight: Could lice have made dinosaurs more aggressive?


Study of insect DNA shows that lice evolved more than 65million years ago
No wonder dinosaurs were so bad-tempered. For scientists have discovered that the prehistoric giants were plagued by lice.

A new study of insect DNA has shown that lice evolved more than 65million years ago, at a time when dinosaurs still ruled the Earth.

The research also suggests that mammals and birds began to diversify into the vast range of different species seen today far earlier in prehistory than was previously thought.


A 44million-year-old louse fossil (left) and a modern version of the parasite (right) that infests aquatic birds. Scientists believe lice may have fed off the blood of feathered dinosaurs


Dr Kevin Johnson, of the University of Illinois, said: 'Our analysis suggests that both bird and mammal lice began to diversify before the mass extinction of dinosaurs.

'And given how widespread lice are on birds, in particular, and also to some extent on mammals, they probably existed on a wide variety of hosts in the past, possibly including dinosaurs.'

The researchers created an evolutionary family tree for lice using DNA from 69 different lineages.

Because changes in DNA accumulate over the millennia, the changes can also be used to create a time-line of the evolution of a related group of animals.

The new study suggests birds and mammals had begun to diversify long before the dinosaurs went extinct.

'Ducks do different things from owls, which do different things from parrots, for example,' said Dr Johnson.

'I was thought that after the dinosaurs went extinct that's when these birds or mammals diversified into these different niches.

'But based on the evidence from lice, the radiation of birds and mammals was already under way before the dinosaurs went extinct.'

Many scientists believe that birds are the descendants of feathered dinosaurs.
Dr Johnson added: 'So maybe birds just inherited their lice from dinosaurs.'



source: dailymail