Seedless avocados may be a new food innovation, but if it weren't for those pesky pits and the giant sloth, we wouldn't have avocados at all. Wait, what? Giant sloths? You read that right. Like the entirety of Joshua Tree National Park, we have the sloth's digestive system to thank for gifting us this creamy fruit.
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I know what you're thinking, how could something without opposable thumbs possibly produce food like a farmer? Okay, maybe that wasn't exactly what you were thinking, but I'm guessing you're a tad puzzled - as you should be. To put it in layman's terms, they simply ate and pooped.
In a recent Twitter post by The American Museum of Natural History, the museum explains that the giant sloth, or Lestodon, is one of the few animals that had the ability to eat an entire avocado, pit and everything. It would then disperse the big seeds through its droppings.
Next time you eat guacamole, thank a giant ground sloth: the Lestodon! These 15-ft animals ate avocado whole, traveled, and then pooped, depositing the pits in new places. Most mammals couldn't handle large seeds, so it was up to megafauna to disperse (and fertilize!) avocados. pic.twitter.com/uBpAqQqgRg
