
Inside Biodiversity How Has Biodiversity Changed Over Millions of Years?
Aug 7, 2025
In this engaging discussion, Dr. Susanne Fritz, a research group head at iDiv and expert in mammal and bird evolution, explores the drastic shifts in biodiversity over millions of years. She delves into the mystery of why large mammals like mammoths vanished during the last ice age and highlights the lasting impacts of climate change and human activity on today's ecosystems. Susanne also shares her thoughts on our current biodiversity crisis and the potential for future recovery, emphasizing the lessons we can learn from evolutionary history.
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Mammal Diversity Was Much Higher
- Mammal diversity in Europe and North America was several times higher 10–15 million years ago than today.
- Fossil-based estimates show diversity has mostly declined since a peak around 11–13 million years ago.
Productivity Drives Mammal Richness
- Plant productivity strongly correlates with the number of mammal genera across millions of years.
- Warmer, wetter climates produced higher plant biomass, supporting more mammal species.
Why The Megafauna Disappeared
- Late Pleistocene extinctions mainly removed large-bodied animals across continents except Africa.
- Most researchers now see a mix of climate-driven habitat loss and increasing human hunting as causes.
