how did crocodiles survive the asteroid that killed the dinosaurs?
- Written by Mike Lee, Professor in Evolutionary Biology (jointly appointed with South Australian Museum), Flinders University
How did the crocodiles survive the asteroid that killed the dinosaurs? – Éamonn, age 5, Western Australia
Hi Éamonn! This is a great question, and one many scientists have asked.
There are two main reasons. First, crocodiles can live for a very long time without food. Second, they lived in places that were the least affected when the asteroid hit Earth.
When the asteroid hit earth
About 66 million years ago, dinosaurs ruled Earth. But then a massive asteroid, more than 9 kilometres wide, slammed into the shallow sea near what is now Mexico.
The explosion from this was so huge, it led to global earthquakes, tidal waves, bushfires and even poisonous rain.
Also, the asteroid hit at one of the worst possible places, where the rocks could easily be “exploded” (or vapourised). This threw up massive amounts of dust into the sky, blocking out the Sun for many months and sending Earth into a long, dark and freezing winter.
Without sunlight, the green plants died, followed by the plant-eating animals that ate them to survive, and the meat-eaters that ate the plant-eaters.
Read more: Curious Kids: What effect did the asteroid that wiped out the dinosaurs have on plants and trees?
Scientists think three-quarters of all the different kinds (species) of animals on Earth were wiped out – including most dinosaurs.
But some managed to survive for a range of reasons.
One important group of dinosaurs sailed through, helped by their ability to fly and find food in faraway places. Their feathers protected them from the cold, and their beaks let them eat buried seeds found near dead plants.
Amazingly, these dinosaur survivors are still with us today. We call them birds!
Read more: How small birds evolved from giant meat eating dinosaurs
Crocodiles had some keys to survival
Crocodiles were another group that famously survived the asteroid. Obviously they can’t fly, don’t have feathers, and don’t eat seeds! But they had other secrets to success.
Firstly, crocodile bodies use very little energy. They lie around a lot, breathe slowly and even have a very slow heartbeat. This is how they can hold their breath underwater for more than an hour.
It also means they can go without food for months, and sometimes more than a year. This would have been very helpful when food (such as other animals) became hard to find once the asteroid hit.
Dinosaurs, on the other hand, were generally more active, which means they needed more energy – especially meat-eaters like Velociraptor. Without food, they would have died quickly.
ShutterstockCrocodiles also lived in places where losing green plants didn’t make a big difference. Think of a forest or a grassland (where many dinosaurs lived): if the plants there die, then all the animals that need them die too, including the meat-eaters which are left with no food.
But the crocodile survivors mostly lived in places like rivers, lakes and coasts. The animals living in these places don’t need green plants as much. Dead plants and animal material washes in from surrounding land, which is eaten by tiny creatures, which are then eaten by larger creatures including crocodiles.
So unlike dinosaurs living on the land, crocodiles in a river would not have starved as soon as the green plants died.
Our mammalian ancestors also survived
A similar reason helps explain why human beings’ ancestors also survived the asteroid impact. These were the small mammals that lived near the end of the age of dinosaurs, which eventually gave rise to all the different kinds of mammals around today (including humans).
They were mainly small, rat-like things that scurried about in the dead leaf litter on the ground, eating insects and worms. These tiny creatures relied not on living green plants, but on dead leaves and bark falling from the trees, or being blown and washed in from elsewhere.
So just like the crocodiles, our tiny ancestors survived the asteroid partly because they didn’t depend heavily on living plants. A good thing too: these lucky survival skills are the reason you and I are here today!
Authors: Mike Lee, Professor in Evolutionary Biology (jointly appointed with South Australian Museum), Flinders University