Why are sloths so slow? - Kenny Coogan

Why are sloths so slow? - Kenny Coogan

The Mystery of Jefferson's Box of Bones

Discovery and Misidentification

  • In 1796, Thomas Jefferson received unidentified bones, including a long claw resembling that of a lion, leading him to speculate about a new North American predator.
  • The bones were later identified as belonging to an extinct giant sloth rather than a lion.

Characteristics of Ground Sloths

  • Prehistoric ground sloths appeared around 35 million years ago, coexisting with other ancient species like mastodons and giant armadillos.
  • The Megalonyx sloth weighed about one ton, while the larger megatherium could reach up to six metric tons.

Diet and Ecological Impact

  • Ground sloths used their strong arms and claws to uproot plants and climb trees for food, primarily grazing on leaves and grasses.
  • They played a crucial role in spreading avocado trees by consuming their large seeds, which smaller animals could not digest.

Extinction Factors

  • Around 10,000 years ago, ground sloths began to disappear alongside other large mammals due to potential ice age impacts or competition from humans.
  • Some smaller species adapted by migrating into treetops; today, six species survive in Central and South America.

Adaptations for Survival

  • Sloths have evolved strategies to cope with their low-energy leafy diet; they extract maximum energy from food using a multi-chambered stomach.
  • Their slow lifestyle minimizes energy expenditure; they move infrequently and take up to weeks to process meals.

Unique Metabolic Traits

  • Sloths possess about 30% less muscle mass than similar-sized animals due to their unhurried lifestyle.
  • They have the slowest metabolism among mammals; body temperature can fluctuate significantly but remains lower than most mammals.
Video description

View full lesson: http://ed.ted.com/lessons/why-are-sloths-so-slow-kenny-coogan Sloths spend most of their time eating, resting, or sleeping; in fact, they descend from their treetops canopies just once a week, for a bathroom break. How are these creatures so low energy? Kenny Coogan describes the physical and behavioral adaptations that allow sloths to be so slow. Lesson by Kenny Coogan, animation by Anton Bogaty.