Lilliput effect
The Lilliput effect is an observed decrease in animal body size in genera that have survived a major extinction. There are several hypotheses as to why these patterns appear in the fossil record, some of which are:
- simple preferential survival of smaller animals,
- dwarfing of larger lineages, and
- evolutionary miniaturization from larger ancestral stocks.
Significance
Trends in body size changes are seen throughout the fossil record in many organisms, and major changes in body size can significantly affect the morphology of the animal itself as well as how it interacts with the environment. Since Urbanek's publication several researchers have described a decrease in body size in fauna post-extinction event, although not all use the term "Lilliput effect" when discussing this trend in body size decrease.The Lilliput effect has been noted by several authors to have occurred after the Permian-Triassic mass extinction: Early Triassic fauna, both marine and terrestrial, is notably smaller than those preceding and following in the geologic record.
Potential causes
Extinction of larger taxa
The extinction event may have been more severe for the larger-bodied species, leaving only species of smaller-bodied animals behind. As such, organisms in the smaller species which then make up the recovering ecosystem, will take time to evolve larger bodies to replace the extinct species and re-occupy the vacant ecological niche for a large-bodied animal. Taxa whose animals are larger may be evolutionarily selected against for several reasons, including- high energy requirements for which the resources may no longer be available,
- increased generation times compared to smaller bodied organisms, and
- smaller populations, which would be more severely affected by environmental changes.