- Mon Dec 09, 2013 8:20 pm
#13217
wwarui,
This is a Resolve the Paradox question. Since the common ancestors of land- and tree-dwelling kangaroos had prehensile tails and long opposable thumbs, and these traits are useful for tree-dwelling kangaroos, one would expect this not to change, especially if a kangaroo's environment didn't change. Land-dwelling kangaroos lost these traits, but tree-dwelling ones did too. Hence the paradox - it's obviously how the environment changed for land-dwelling kangaroos, but tree-dwelling kangaroos should have kept the same traits.
One thing we don't know about is the subsequent evolution of kangaroos. They had a common ancestor with prehensile tails and long opposable thumbs, but it's possible that after that, all kangaroos became land-dwelling, and then some went back to being tree-dwelling, but only after a long enough time to lose the traits that the ancestor had in the first place. This is exactly what D says. Modern land- and tree-dwelling kangaroos have a more recent common ancestor, a land-dwelling variety, that lost the traits that the older ancestor referred to in the stimulus had. So modern kangaroos developed from a land-dwelling kangaroo that would naturally lack the qualities that are useful only in the trees, and modern tree-dwelling kangaroos have not yet developed the different traits that would help them in their new environment.
Robert