Ancient sloths, creatures that once roamed varied terrains ranging from dense forests to arid deserts, present a fascinating evolutionary story marked by dramatic differences in size and ecology. These differences, spanning from diminutive tree-dwelling sloths to colossal ground giants, were largely governed by the habitats they occupied and the climatic forces shaping those environments. A groundbreaking study recently published in Science elucidates the intricacies behind these size variations using an integrative approach combining ancient DNA analysis, fossil morphology, and climatic data.
Today’s sloths are small, slow-moving mammals that inhabit the canopies of tropical forests, rarely exceeding 14 pounds in weight. However, thousands of years ago, sloths were a much more diverse and extraordinary group. Extinct species like the Megatherium dwarfed modern elephants by weighing approximately 8,000 pounds, exhibiting a bear-like stature but almost five times larger. These giants were terrestrial, incapable of arboreal living due to their immense mass. Such massive sloths acted as critical components of their ecosystems, performing ecological functions analogous to modern large herbivores like giraffes by browsing tall trees with prehensile tongues.
Researchers, led by Rachel Narducci of the Florida Museum of Natural History, tackled the longstanding mystery of sloth gigantism by sequencing ancient DNA and cross-referencing over 400 fossil specimens sourced from seventeen natural history museums worldwide. Their aim was to construct a comprehensive evolutionary framework tracing sloths’ lineage over 35 million years, correlating their size dynamics with environmental and behavioral adaptations. The resulting phylogenetic tree illuminated multiple divergent lineages exhibiting ground-dwelling, semi-arboreal, and fully arboreal lifestyles, each associated with distinct body size thresholds.
One pivotal insight from the study is the fundamental role of arboreality in constraining body size. Sloths that exclusively lived in tree canopies remained small due to the biomechanical limits imposed by branches, which fracture under excessive weight. This ecological pressure explains why arboreal species like modern three-toed sloths reliably maintain low body masses, enabling them to adeptly navigate forest canopies without risking fatal falls. In contrast, ground sloths, liberated from the constraints of tree-based locomotion, diversified into an extraordinary range of sizes, from moderate species like the Shasta ground sloth to gargantuan forms spanning savannahs, deserts, and boreal forests.
The study further explores how climate and habitat changes over the Miocene and Pleistocene epochs profoundly influenced size evolution. A volcanic event in the Pacific Northwest, spanning nearly 750,000 years and coinciding with the Mid-Miocene Climatic Optimum, expelled greenhouse gases that induced global warming. This warming phase expanded forested habitats, favoring smaller sloths that could exploit increased arboreal niches and mitigate heat stress—a physiological drive known to favor decreased body size in mammals. The fossil record corroborates this trend with a marked reduction in sloth size during this interval.
Conversely, subsequent global cooling phases reversed these size reductions. As temperatures dropped and open grasslands and harsher environments expanded, larger body volumes became advantageous by facilitating improved thermoregulation and energy efficiency. In open habitats with limited resources and increased predation pressures, gigantism provided both physical defense and metabolic resilience. For example, sloths migrating across the Andes and North American deserts grew robust, protected by osteoderms—small, bony skin plates analogous to those of armadillos—which further reinforced their defense strategies.
Intriguingly, sloth ecological niches extended beyond terrestrial zones into marine environments. Species like Thalassocnus adopted a semi-aquatic lifestyle along the Pacific coast, evolving dense rib bones to aid buoyancy control and elongated snouts suited to grazing submerged seagrass beds. This remarkable convergence with marine mammals such as manatees underscores the evolutionary plasticity characterizing sloth lineages, a trait now better understood thanks to the study’s integrative methodology.
The research underscores the significance of behavioral plasticity in shaping sloth evolution. Species toggled between climbing and ground locomotion for millions of years with negligible changes in size, suggesting that selective pressures favored stability until a drastic environmental catalyst arose. The volcanic eruption and subsequent climate shifts provided this impetus, triggering a reconfiguration of body size that aligned with available niches and survival tactics.
Yet, the study’s findings also delicately convey the fragility of gigantism when confronted with anthropogenic factors. The arrival of humans in North America roughly 15,000 years ago correlates closely with the extinction of large ground sloth species. Their enormous size, once a protective advantage against predators and climatic extremes, ironically became a liability in the face of human hunting and habitat disturbances. The slower reproductive rates and limited defense mechanisms inherent to such giants rendered them vulnerable to overexploitation and environmental changes precipitated by human expansion.
Even arboreal sloths, typically insulated from human predation by their treetop refuge, suffered losses. Caribbean tree sloth species survived until approximately 4,500 years ago, coexisting with human settlers who arrived contemporaneously with ancient Egyptian pyramid construction. This timeline hints at complex interactions where habitat encroachment and hunting drove eventual local extinctions, illustrating how human impacts transcended ecological safety zones.
The multidisciplinary team behind this study, comprising paleontologists, evolutionary biologists, and climatologists from institutions across the Americas and Europe, utilized an unprecedented scale of fossil measurements and ancient genomic data to unravel this evolutionary saga. Their work not only reconstructs the past diversity and adaptability of sloths but also offers a broader model for understanding how climate and habitat influence the size and survival of species through geological time.
In conclusion, the journey of the sloth lineage—from modest-sized arboreal dwellers to colossal ground-bound behemoths, followed by shrinking in response to warming climates and eventual extinction—exemplifies the intricate balance between anatomy, environment, and evolutionary force. The synthesis of paleontological data with genomic and climatic analyses advances our grasp of mammalian evolution, demonstrating that habitat-driven selective pressures and climatic fluctuations are central drivers of morphological diversity. This research not only sheds light on the ancient past but imparts cautionary lessons on how contemporary species might navigate—and potentially succumb to—rapid environmental transformations today.
Subject of Research: Evolutionary drivers of size variation in extinct and extant sloths, including the impact of habitat and climate change
Article Title: The emergence and demise of giant sloths
News Publication Date: 22-May-2025
Web References:
Study DOI: 10.1126/science.adu0704
Volcanic eruption & climate: https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.aat8223
Florida Museum fossils space research: https://www.floridamuseum.ufl.edu/science/florida-museum-fossils-go-to-space/
Discovery of osteoderms in spiny mice: https://www.floridamuseum.ufl.edu/science/move-over-armadillos-theres-a-new-bone-plated-mammal-in-town/
References:
Narducci et al., “The emergence and demise of giant sloths,” Science, DOI: 10.1126/science.adu0704, 2025.
Image Credits: Illustration by Diego Barletta
Keywords: Paleontology, Extinction, Climate change, Volcanic eruptions, Mammals, Evolution, Geology
Tags: ancient DNA analysisancient ground slothsclimate impact on species sizeecological roles of extinct animalsevolutionary history of slothsextinct megafaunafossil morphology studieslarge herbivores in historyprehistoric ecosystemsRachel Narducci researchScience journal studysloth gigantism mystery