In the K–Pg extinction event, every land animal over was wiped out, leaving open several
niches at the beginning of the epoch.|alt=Portrait view of a heavily built 4-legged animal with a strong tail Mammals had first appeared in the
Late Triassic, and remained small and nocturnal throughout the Mesozoic to avoid competition with dinosaurs (
nocturnal bottleneck), and the largest known Mesozoic mammal,
Repenomamus robustus reached about in length and in weight–comparable to the modern day
Virginia opossum. Though some mammals could sporadically venture out in daytime (
cathemerality) by roughly 10 million years before the K–Pg extinction event, they only became strictly
diurnal (active in the daytime) sometime after. In general, Paleocene mammals retained this small size until near the end of the epoch, and, consequently, early mammal bones are not well preserved in the fossil record, and most of what is known comes from fossil teeth.
Sinonyx at the
Museo delle Scienze|alt=Portrait view of a wolf-like skeleton with large teeth Nonetheless, following the K–Pg extinction event, mammals very quickly diversified and filled the empty niches. Mammal richness during this epoch, in contrast to the present day, varied insignificantly with latitude. Modern mammals are subdivided into
therians (modern members are
placentals and
marsupials) and
monotremes. These three groups all originated in the Cretaceous. Paleocene marsupials include
Peradectes, and monotremes
Monotrematum. The epoch featured the rise of many
crown placental groups—groups that have living members in modern day—such as the earliest
afrotherian Ocepeia,
xenarthran Utaetus, rodent
Tribosphenomys and
Paramys, the forerunners of primates the
Plesiadapiformes, earliest
carnivorans
Ravenictis and
Pristinictis, possible
pangolins
Palaeanodonta, possible forerunners of
odd-toed ungulates
Phenacodontidae, and
eulipotyphlans
Nyctitheriidae. Though therian mammals had probably already begun to diversify around 10 to 20 million years before the K–Pg extinction event, average mammal size increased greatly after the boundary, and a
radiation into
frugivory (fruit-eating) and
omnivory began, namely with the newly evolving large herbivores such as the
Taeniodonta,
Tillodonta,
Pantodonta,
Polydolopimorphia, and the
Dinocerata. Large carnivores include the wolf-like
Mesonychia, such as
Ankalagon and
Sinonyx. Though there was an explosive diversification, the
affinities of most Paleocene mammals are unknown, and only primates, carnivorans, and rodents have unambiguous Paleocene origins, resulting in a 10 million year gap in the fossil record of other mammalian crown orders. The most species-rich order of Paleocene mammals is
Condylarthra, which is a
wastebasket taxon for miscellaneous
bunodont hoofed mammals. Other ambiguous orders include the
Leptictida,
Cimolesta, and
Creodonta. This uncertainty blurs the early evolution of placentals. probably fueled by the diversification of fruit-bearing trees and associated insects, and the modern bird groups had likely already diverged within four million years of the K–Pg extinction event. However, the fossil record of birds in the Paleocene is rather poor compared to other groups, limited globally to mainly waterbirds such as the early penguin
Waimanu. The earliest
arboreal crown group bird known is
Tsidiiyazhi, a
mousebird dating to around 62 Ma. The fossil record also includes early owls such as the large
Berruornis from France, and the smaller
Ogygoptynx from the United States. Almost all archaic birds (any bird outside Neornithes) went extinct during the K–Pg extinction event, although the archaic
Qinornis is recorded in the Paleocene. In the Mesozoic, birds and
pterosaurs exhibited size-related
niche partitioning—no known Late Cretaceous flying bird had a wingspan greater than nor exceeded a weight of , whereas contemporary pterosaurs ranged from , probably to avoid competition. Their extinction allowed flying birds to attain greater size, such as
pelagornithids and
pelecaniformes. The Paleocene pelagornithid
Protodontopteryx was quite small compared to later members, with a wingspan of about , comparable to a
gull. On the archipelago-continent of Europe, the flightless bird
Gastornis was the largest herbivore at tall for the largest species, possibly due to lack of competition from newly emerging large mammalian herbivores which were prevalent on the other continents. The carnivorous
terror birds in South America have a contentious appearance in the Paleocene with
Paleopsilopterus, though the first definitive appearance is in the Eocene.
Reptiles '' at the
Field Museum of Natural History|alt=Topside view of a crocodile skeleton It is generally believed all non-avian dinosaurs went extinct at the K–Pg extinction event 66 Ma, though there are a couple of controversial claims of
Paleocene dinosaurs which would indicate a gradual decline of dinosaurs. Contentious dates include remains from the
Hell Creek Formation dated 40,000 years after the boundary, and a
hadrosaur femur from the
San Juan Basin dated to 64.5 Ma, but such stray late forms may be
zombie taxa that were washed out and moved to younger sediments. In the wake of the K–Pg extinction event, 83% of lizard and snake (
squamate) species went extinct, and the diversity did not fully recover until the end of the Paleocene. However, since the only major squamate lineages to disappear in the event were the
mosasaurs and
polyglyphanodontians (the latter making up 40% of Maastrichtian lizard diversity), and most major squamate groups had evolved by the Cretaceous, the event probably did not greatly affect squamate evolution, and newly evolving squamates did not seemingly branch out into new niches as mammals. That is, Cretaceous and Paleogene squamates filled the same niches. Nonetheless, there was a faunal turnover of squamates, and groups that were dominant by the Eocene were not as abundant in the Cretaceous, namely the
anguids,
iguanas,
night lizards,
pythons,
colubrids,
boas, and
worm lizards. Only small squamates are known from the early Paleocene—the largest snake
Helagras was in length—but the late Paleocene snake
Titanoboa grew to over long, the longest snake ever recorded.
Kawasphenodon peligrensis from the early Paleocene of South America represents the youngest record of
Rhynchocephalia outside of New Zealand, where the only extant representative of the order, the
tuatara, resides. Freshwater
crocodilians and
choristoderans were among the aquatic reptiles to have survived the K–Pg extinction event, probably because freshwater environments were not as impacted as marine ones. One example of a Paleocene crocodile is
Borealosuchus, which averaged in length at the
Wannagan Creek site. Among
crocodyliformes, the aquatic and terrestrial
dyrosaurs and the fully terrestrial
sebecids would also survive the K-Pg extinction event, and a late surviving member of
Pholidosauridae is also known from the Danian of Morocco. Three choristoderans are known from the Paleocene: The
gharial-like
neochoristoderans
Champsosaurus—the largest is the Paleocene
C. gigas at
, Simoedosaurus—the largest specimen measuring , and an indeterminate species of the lizard like non-neochoristoderan
Lazarussuchus around 44 centimetres in length. The last known choristoderes, belonging to the genus
Lazarussuchus, are known from the Miocene. Turtles experienced a decline in the
Campanian (Late Cretaceous) during a cooling event, and recovered during the PETM at the end of the Paleocene. Turtles were not greatly affected by the K–Pg extinction event, and around 80% of species survived. In Colombia, a 60 million year old turtle with a carapace,
Carbonemys, was discovered.
Amphibians There is little evidence amphibians were affected very much by the K–Pg extinction event, probably because the freshwater habitats they inhabited were not as greatly impacted as marine environments. In the Hell Creek Formation of eastern Montana, a 1990 study found no extinction in amphibian species across the boundary. The
true toads evolved during the Paleocene. The final record of
albanerpetontids from North America and outside of Europe and Anatolia, an unnamed species of
Albanerpeton, is known from the Paleocene aged
Paskapoo Formation in Canada.
Fish Eekaulostomus from
Palenque, Mexico|alt=The top half is a rock slab featuring an oblong, orange-brown fish impression, and the bottom half is an illustration highlighting the armored scutes on its body The small
pelagic fish population recovered rather quickly, and there was a low extinction rate for sharks and
rays. Overall, only 12% of fish species went extinct. Almost immediately following the K–Pg extinction event,
ray-finned fish — today, representing nearly half of all vertebrate taxa – became much more numerous and increased in size, and rose to dominate the open-oceans.
Acanthomorphs—a group of ray-finned fish which, today, represent a third of all vertebrate life—experienced a massive diversification following the K–Pg extinction event, dominating marine ecosystems by the end of the Paleocene, refilling vacant, open-ocean predatory niches as well as spreading out into recovering reef systems. In specific,
percomorphs diversified faster than any other vertebrate group at the time, with the exception of birds; Cretaceous percomorphs varied very little in body plan, whereas, by the Eocene, percomorphs evolved into vastly varying creatures
jacks,
flatfishes, and
aulostomoid (
trumpetfish and
cornetfish). However, the discovery of the Cretaceous
cusk eel Pastorius shows that the body plans of at least some percomorphs were already highly variable, perhaps indicating an already diverse array of percomorph body plans before the Paleocene. '' shark tooth from
Oued Zem, Morocco|alt=A brown shark toothed with top part lodged in a rock Conversely, sharks and rays appear to have been unable to exploit the vacant niches, and recovered the same pre-extinction abundance. There was a faunal turnover of sharks from
mackerel sharks to
ground sharks, as ground sharks are more suited to hunting the rapidly diversifying ray-finned fish whereas mackerel sharks target larger prey. The first
megatoothed shark,
Otodus obliquus—the ancestor of the giant
megalodon—is recorded from the Paleocene. Several Paleocene freshwater fish are recorded from North America, including
bowfins,
gars,
arowanas,
Gonorynchidae,
common catfish,
smelts, and
pike.
Insects and arachnids from the late Paleocene Danish
Fur Formation Insect recovery varied from place to place. For example, it may have taken until the PETM for insect diversity to recover in the western interior of North America, whereas Patagonian insect diversity had recovered by four million years after the K–Pg extinction event. In some areas, such as the
Bighorn Basin in Wyoming, there is a dramatic increase in plant predation during the PETM, although this is probably not indicative of a diversification event in insects due to rising temperatures because plant predation decreases following the PETM. More likely, insects followed their host plant or plants which were expanding into mid-latitude regions during the PETM, and then retreated afterward. The middle-to-late Paleocene French
Menat Formation shows an abundance of
beetles (making up 77.5% of the insect diversity)—especially
weevils (50% of diversity),
jewel beetles,
leaf beetles, and
reticulated beetles—as well as other
true bugs—such as
pond skaters—and
cockroaches. To a lesser degree, there are also
orthopterans,
hymenopterans,
butterflies, and
flies, though
planthoppers were more common than flies. Representing less than 1% of fossil remains
dragonflies,
caddisflies,
mayflies,
earwigs,
mantises,
net-winged insects, and possibly
termites. The Wyoming
Hanna Formation is the only known Paleocene formation to produce sizable pieces of amber, as opposed to only small droplets. The amber was formed by a single or a closely related group of either
taxodiaceaen or
pine tree(s) which produced
cones similar to those of
dammaras. Only one insect, a
thrips, has been identified. '' from the Canadian
Paskapoo Formation|alt=A slab of rock with a faint impression of an ant There is a gap in the
ant fossil record from 78 to 55 Ma, except for the
aneuretine Napakimyrma paskapooensis from the 62–56 Ma Canadian
Paskapoo Formation. Given high abundance in the Eocene, two of the modern dominant ant subfamilies—
Ponerinae and
Myrmicinae—likely originated and greatly diversified in the Paleocene, acting as major hunters of arthropods, and probably competed with each other for food and nesting grounds in the dense angiosperm leaf litter. Myrmicines expanded their diets to seeds and formed
trophobiotic symbiotic relationships with
aphids,
mealybugs,
treehoppers, and other
honeydew secreting insects which were also successful in angiosperm forests, allowing them to invade other
biomes, such as the canopy or temperate environments, and achieve a worldwide distribution by the middle Eocene. About 80% of the butterfly and moth (lepidopteran) fossil record occurs in the early Paleogene, specifically the late Paleocene and the middle-to-late Eocene. Most Paleocene lepidopteran
compression fossils come from the Danish
Fur Formation. Though there is low family-level diversity in the Paleocene compared to later epochs, this may be due to a largely incomplete fossil record. The evolution of bats had a profound effect on lepidopterans, which feature several
anti-predator adaptations such as
echolocation jamming and the ability to detect bat signals. Bees were likely heavily impacted by the K–Pg extinction event and a die-off of flowering plants, though the bee fossil record is very limited. The oldest
kleptoparasitic bee,
Paleoepeolus, is known from the Paleocene 60 Ma. Though the Eocene features, by far, the highest proportion of known fossil spider species, the Paleocene spider assemblage is quite low. Some spider groups began to diversify around the PETM, such as
jumping spiders, and possibly
coelotine spiders (members of the
funnel weaver family). The diversification of mammals had a profound effect on parasitic insects, namely the evolution of bats, which have more ectoparasites than any other known mammal or bird. The PETM's effect on mammals greatly impacted the evolution of
fleas,
ticks, and
oestroids.
Marine invertebrates , the dominant reef-building organism of the Cretaceous Among marine invertebrates,
plankton and those with a planktonic stage in their development (
meroplankton) were most impacted by the K–Pg extinction event, and plankton populations crashed. Nearly 90% of all calcifying plankton species perished. This reverberated up and caused a global marine food chain collapse, namely with the extinction of
ammonites and large raptorial marine reptiles. Nonetheless, the rapid diversification of large fish species indicates a healthy plankton population through the Paleocene. A 2019 study found that in
Seymour Island, Antarctica, the marine life assemblage consisted primarily of burrowing creatures—such as burrowing clams and snails—for around 320,000 years after the K–Pg extinction event, and it took around a million years for the marine diversity to return to previous levels. Areas closer to the equator may have been more affected. The Late Cretaceous
decapod crustacean assemblage of
James Ross Island appears to have been mainly
pioneer species and the ancestors of modern fauna, such as the first Antarctic crabs and the first appearance of the
lobsters of the genera
Linuparus,
Metanephrops, and
Munidopsis which still inhabit Antarctica today. In the Cretaceous, the main reef-building creatures were the box-like
bivalve rudists instead of coral—though a diverse Cretaceous coral assemblage did exist—and rudists had collapsed by the time of the K–Pg extinction event. Some corals are known to have survived in higher latitudes in the Late Cretaceous and into the Paleogene, and
hard coral-dominated reefs may have recovered by 8 million years after the K–Pg extinction event, though the coral fossil record of this time is rather sparse. Though there was a lack of extensive coral reefs in the Paleocene, there were some colonies—mainly dominated by
zooxanthellate corals—in shallow coastal (
neritic) areas. Starting in the latest Cretaceous and continuing until the early Eocene,
calcareous corals rapidly diversified. Corals probably competed mainly with
red and
coralline algae for space on the seafloor. Calcified
dasycladalean green algae experienced the greatest diversity in their evolutionary history in the Paleocene. Though coral reef ecosystems do not become particularly abundant in the fossil record until the Miocene (possibly due to
preservation bias), strong Paleocene coral reefs have been identified in what are now the
Pyrenees (emerging as early as 63 Ma), with some smaller Paleocene coral reefs identified across the Mediterranean region. ==See also==