Why are sloths so slow Kenny Coogan

In 1796, Thomas Jefferson received
a box of bones he couldn’t identify.

A long, sharp claw reminded him of a lion,

but the arm bones
suggested a larger animal,

one about three meters long.

Thinking it might be huge unknown
species of North American lion,

Jefferson warned explorers Lewis and Clark

to keep an eye out
for this mysterious predator.

But Jefferson’s box of bones didn’t
come from a lion.

They came from an extinct giant sloth.

Prehistoric ground sloths first appeared
around 35 million years ago.

Dozens of species lived across
North, Central and South America,

alongside other ancient creatures
like mastodons

and giant armadillos.

Some ground sloths, like the megalonychid,
were cat-sized,

but many were massive.

Jefferson’s sloth, Megalonyx,
weighed about a ton,

and that was small
compared to megatherium,

which could reach six metric tons,
as much as an elephant.

They ambled through the forests
and savannas using their strong arms

and sharp claws

to uproot plants and climb trees,

grazing on grasses, leaves,
and prehistoric avocados.

In fact, we might not have avocados
today if not for the giant sloths.

Smaller animals couldn’t swallow
the avocado’s huge seed,

but the sloths could,

and they spread avocado trees
far and wide.

Ground sloths flourished for millions
of years,

but around 10,000 years ago,
they started disappearing

along with the Western Hemisphere’s
other giant mammals.

Researchers think that ground sloths
could have been pushed out

by an oncoming ice age,

or competition with other species,
maybe humans,

who arrived in the region around the time
most of the sloths went extinct.

Some of the smaller sloths did survive
and migrated to the treetops.

Today, there are six species left
living in the rainforest canopies

of Central and South America.

Hanging out in the trees is a good way
to avoid predators,

and there are plenty of leaves to eat.

But this diet has its drawbacks.

Animals extract energy from food
and use that energy to move around,

maintain their body temperature,

keep their organs working,

and all the other activities necessary
for survival.

But leaves don’t contain much energy,

and that which they do have
is tough to extract.

Most herbivores supplement a leafy diet
with higher energy foods

like fruit and seeds.

But sloths, especially three-toed sloths,
rely on leaves almost exclusively.

They’ve evolved finely tuned strategies
for coping with this restricted diet.

First, they extract as much energy from
their food as possible.

Sloths have a multi-chambered stomach
that takes up a third of their body,

and depending on the species,

they can spend five to seven days,
or even weeks, processing a meal.

The other piece of the puzzle
is to use as little energy as possible.

One way sloths do this is, of course,
by not moving very much.

They spend most of their time eating,
resting, or sleeping.

They descend from the canopy just once
a week for a bathroom break.

When sloths do move, it’s not very fast.

It would take a sloth about five minutes
to cross an average neighborhood street.

This unhurried approach to life means
that sloths don’t need very much muscle.

In fact, they have about 30% less
muscle mass than other animals their size.

Sloths also use less energy
to keep themselves warm

because their body temperature
can fluctuate by about five degrees Celsius,

less than a cold-blooded reptile,
but more than most mammals.

These physical and behavioral adaptations
minimize the sloth’s energy expenditure,

or metabolic rate.

Three-toed sloths have the slowest
metabolism of any mammal.

The giant panda is second slowest,

and two-toed sloths come in third.

Moving slowly has allowed sloths
to thrive in their treetop habitat.

But it’s also made the sloths themselves
a great habitat for other organisms,

including algae, which provides a little
extra camouflage, and maybe even a snack.

Sloths may not be giant anymore,

but that doesn’t make
them any less remarkable.

1796 年,托马斯·杰斐逊收到
了一盒他无法辨认的骨头。

一只又长又尖的爪子让他想起了一头狮子,

但臂骨
暗示着一种更大的动物

,大约三米长。 杰斐逊

认为这可能是巨大的未知
北美狮子物种,他

警告探险家刘易斯和克拉克


留意这种神秘的捕食者。

但杰斐逊的骨头盒不是
来自狮子。

它们来自已灭绝的巨型树懒。

史前地懒
大约在 3500 万年前首次出现。

数十种物种生活在
北美洲、中美洲和南美洲,


乳齿象

和巨型犰狳等其他古代生物一起生活。

一些地懒,如巨爪龙,
有猫那么大,

但很多都很大。

杰斐逊的树懒,Megalonyx,
重约一吨,

可达到六公吨的巨型树懒相比,它
很小,相当于一头大象。

他们在森林
和热带稀树草原上漫步,用强壮的手臂

和锋利的

爪子连根拔起植物,爬树,

吃草、树叶
和史前鳄梨。

事实上,
如果不是因为巨型树懒,我们今天可能没有鳄梨。

较小的动物无法
吞下牛油果的巨大种子,

但树懒可以

,它们将牛油
果树广泛传播。

地懒繁荣了
数百万年,

但大约在一万年前,
它们开始

与西半球的
其他巨型哺乳动物一起消失。

研究人员认为,地面树懒
可能是

由于即将到来的冰河时代

或与其他物种(可能是人类)的竞争而被推出的,这些物种

在大多数树懒灭绝的时候到达该地区

一些较小的树懒确实幸存下来
并迁移到了树梢。

今天,有六种物种
生活在

中美洲和南美洲的热带雨林中。

在树上闲逛是
避开捕食者的好方法,

而且有很多树叶可以吃。

但这种饮食有其缺点。

动物从食物中提取能量
并利用该能量四处走动、

保持体温、

保持器官工作

以及所有其他
生存所需的活动。

但树叶不含太多能量

,它们所拥有
的能量很难提取。

大多数食草动物
用水果和种子等能量较高的食物来补充绿叶饮食

但是树懒,尤其是三趾树懒,
几乎完全依赖树叶。

他们已经进化出精心调整的策略
来应对这种限制饮食。

首先,他们从食物中提取尽可能多的能量

树懒有一个多腔的胃
,占据了它们身体的三分之一

,根据物种的不同,

它们可以花 5 到 7 天
甚至几周的时间来处理一顿饭。

另一个难题
是尽可能少地使用能量。

树懒做到这一点的一种方法当然
是不经常移动。

他们大部分时间都在吃饭、
休息或睡觉。

他们每周只从树冠上下来
一次,去洗手间休息。

当树懒移动时,它不是很快。

穿过一条普通的社区街道大约需要五分钟。

这种从容不迫的生活方式
意味着树懒不需要太多的肌肉。

事实上,它们的
肌肉质量比其他同等大小的动物少 30%。

树懒也使用较少的能量
来保持自己的温暖,

因为它们的体温
可以波动约 5 摄氏度,

低于冷血爬行动物,
但高于大多数哺乳动物。

这些身体和行为适应
使树懒的能量消耗

或代谢率最小化。

三趾树懒的
新陈代谢是所有哺乳动物中最慢的。

大熊猫第二慢

,二趾树懒排第三。

缓慢移动使树懒
在树顶栖息地茁壮成长。

但这也使树懒本身
成为其他生物的绝佳栖息地,

包括藻类,它提供了一点
额外的伪装,甚至可能是一种零食。

树懒可能不再是巨大的了,

但这并没有让
它们变得不那么引人注目。