A 250-million-year-old fossil egg containing a Lystrosaurus embryo has provided the first direct evidence that mammal ancestors laid eggs. Discovered in South Africa, the find resolves a decades-old question about early mammalian reproduction following the End-Permian extinction. Researchers used advanced imaging to reveal the embryo's pre-hatching stage inside a soft-shelled egg.
Lystrosaurus, a plant-eating synapsid and ancestor of mammals, dominated ecosystems after the End-Permian Mass Extinction around 252 million years ago, which wiped out most life amid extreme heat and droughts. A new study published in PLOS ONE details a rare fossil egg from the Triassic of South Africa, identified by an international team including Professor Julien Benoit, Professor Jennifer Botha of the University of the Witwatersrand, and Dr. Vincent Fernandez of the European Synchrotron (ESRF) in France. The specimen, found in 2008 by fossil preparator John Nyaphuli during a field excursion led by Botha, contains a curled-up embryo that could not feed itself due to an unfused lower jaw, or mandible symphysis, Professor Benoit noted: 'When I saw the incomplete mandibular symphysis, I was genuinely excited.' The egg was large relative to the adult's body size, packed with yolk for nutrient-rich development without parental milk-feeding, aiding survival in harsh post-extinction conditions. Synchrotron X-ray CT scanning at ESRF confirmed the soft shell, which rarely fossilizes, and precocial traits in the hatchlings, enabling quick independence. Professor Botha described the breakthrough: 'This is the first time we can say, with confidence, that mammal ancestors like Lystrosaurus laid eggs.' The discovery highlights how reproductive strategies contributed to Lystrosaurus's success, offering insights into resilience during global crises, as Benoit explained in detailing the embryo's pre-hatching stage.