Large Apes Died Out After Refusing To Give Up Their Fruit Diet

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Study says the earth's largest ever ape died out because it refused to eat its greens

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Gigantopithecus, one of the largest apes to roam the earth over 100,000 years ago, refused to adapt to a new diet after the last ice age and became extinct.

It refused to eat its greens laid out in the new savannah grasslands and remained partial to its preferred diet of fresh and fermented fruits of the remaining forested sanctuaries.

Scientists are puzzled at the choice, that eventually condemned the mega ape to extinction.

The Guardian reports:

Gigantopithecus – the closest nature ever came to producing a real King Kong – weighed five times as much as an adult man and probably stood 3m (9ft) tall, according to rough estimates.

In its heyday a million years ago, it inhabited semi-tropical forests in southernChina and mainland south-east Asia.apes

Until now, though, almost nothing was known about the giant’s anatomical shape or habits.

The only fossil records are four partial lower jaws, and perhaps a thousand teeth – the first of which turned up in the 1930s in Hong Kong apothecaries, where they were sold as “dragon’s teeth”.

These meagre remains “are clearly insufficient to say if the animal was bipedal or quadrupedal, and what would be its body proportions”, Herve Bocherens, a researcher at Tübingen University in Germany, said.

Its closest modern cousin is the orangutan, but whether Gigantopithecus had the same golden-red hue, or was black like a gorilla, is unknown.

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Gigantopithecus- San Diego Museum of Man

Examining slight variations in carbon isotopes found in tooth enamel, Bocherens and an international team of scientists showed that the primordial King Kong lived only in the forest, was a strict vegetarian and probably wasn’t crazy about bamboo.

These narrow preferences did not pose a problem for Gigantopithecus until Earth was struck by a massive ice age during the Pleistocene epoch, which stretched from about 2.6m to 12,000 years ago.

That’s when nature, evolution – and perhaps a refusal to try new foods – conspired to doom the giant ape, Bocherens said.

“Due to its size, Gigantopithecus presumably depended on a large amount of food,” he said.

“When during the Pleistocene, more and more forested area turned into savannah landscapes, there was simply an insufficient food supply.”

And yet, according to the study, other apes and early humans in Africa that had comparable dental gear were able to survive similar transitions by eating the leaves, grass and roots offered by their new environments.

But for some reason, Asia’s giant ape – which was probably too heavy to climb trees, or swing in their branches – did not make the switch.

“Gigantopithecus probably did not have the same ecological flexibility and possibly lacked the physiological ability to resist stress and food shortage,” notes the study, which is to be published in a specialist journal, Quaternary International.

Whether the mega-ape could have adapted to a changing world but didn’t, or whether it was doomed by climate and its genes, is probably one mystery that will never be solved.

Edmondo Burr
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BA Economics/Statistics CEO