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by rsynnott 2102 days ago
It does, generally on islands: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Island_gigantism

Humans tend to exterminate them.

2 comments

And also in environments with high oxygen concentration. At one point dragonflies were the size of cats (the cause is different from deep sea gigantism).
I think that’s an over generalization. The La Brea tarpit types were extinguished due to climate change. It’s also postulated mammoths and such were also affected by climate change, food availability and hunting. None the less, before humans came on the scene large animals came and went.

Of course if they had survived to even antiquity, yes, we’d probably have hunted them to extinction.

Well, sure, there are loads that died out before humans showed up. But of those that existed when we showed up, we have exterminated almost all of them.

> Of course if they had survived to even antiquity, yes, we’d probably have hunted them to extinction.

Often it wasn't even hunting. New Zealand's various giant ground parrots weren't THAT delicious. We introduced invasive species which did the extermination for us, in that case (and many/most bird-y cases, at least).

Hard to know how you could state this so confidently, snacked on a kakapo recently?