HomeScienceDinosaurs were ecosystem engineers and study shows how their sudden extinction changed Earth’s rivers

Dinosaurs were ecosystem engineers and study shows how their sudden extinction changed Earth’s rivers

Dinosaurs’ extinction was caused by the Chicxulub asteroid striking Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula. Its fallout triggered rapid global change.

September 18, 2025 / 11:37 IST
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Dinosaurs’ Extinction Reshaped Rivers and Landscapes, Scientists Discover (Image: Julius Csotonyi)
Dinosaurs’ Extinction Reshaped Rivers and Landscapes, Scientists Discover (Image: Julius Csotonyi)

The story of dinosaurs often ends with their sudden extinction. Yet new research shows their disappearance reshaped rivers and landscapes in ways still visible today. Could these lost giants have been nature’s ecosystem engineers?

How Did Dinosaurs Shape Ancient Rivers?

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A University of Michigan study suggests dinosaurs controlled vegetation. By trampling plants and knocking trees down, they kept open spaces. This created unstable floodplains where rivers spread widely without strong meanders. Once dinosaurs vanished, forests flourished freely across the land. Dense trees stabilised soil and locked sediments in place. Water then flowed into structured rivers with broad, looping bends.

The study, published in Communications Earth & Environment, highlights how rapidly Earth can change. Lead researcher Luke Weaver said the extinction showed life itself could alter landscapes. It was not only climate or geology shaping environments but also animals themselves.