![Love guacamole? Thank the ground sloths. Avocados and other large seeded fruits were propagated by prehistoric megafauna eating them whole and were spread far and wide in their poops! : r/Awwducational Love guacamole? Thank the ground sloths. Avocados and other large seeded fruits were propagated by prehistoric megafauna eating them whole and were spread far and wide in their poops! : r/Awwducational](https://cdn2.vox-cdn.com/thumbor/RQ0FZT4olfK1CHwQDXO07k0xFyc=/cdn0.vox-cdn.com/uploads/chorus_asset/file/3592802/megalonyx.0.jpg)
Love guacamole? Thank the ground sloths. Avocados and other large seeded fruits were propagated by prehistoric megafauna eating them whole and were spread far and wide in their poops! : r/Awwducational
Sloth of the day - Next time you eat guacamole, thank a giant ground sloth! These 15-ft animals ate avocado whole, traveled, and then pooped, depositing the pits in new places. Most
![Next time you eat guacamole, thank a giant ground sloth! These 15-ft animals ate avocado whole, traveled, and then pooped, depo… | Ground sloth, Animals, Rainforest Next time you eat guacamole, thank a giant ground sloth! These 15-ft animals ate avocado whole, traveled, and then pooped, depo… | Ground sloth, Animals, Rainforest](https://i.pinimg.com/736x/31/7b/78/317b788b1d52923db24aefdb12a2a1e1.jpg)
Next time you eat guacamole, thank a giant ground sloth! These 15-ft animals ate avocado whole, traveled, and then pooped, depo… | Ground sloth, Animals, Rainforest
The Sloth Conservation Foundation - Do you love avocados? Did you know you have sloths to thank for these delicious, nutritious, green fruits that most of us are fortunate enough to have
American Museum of Natural History - On National Avocado Day, let's appreciate megafauna, which helped disperse fruits with oversized seeds! Most mammals couldn't consume large seeds, so megafauna—including giant ground sloths, mammoths,
![James Wong on Twitter: "Plants cover their seeds in tasty fruity flesh to entice animals to scoff them & spread them in their droppings. This makes sense with apples and cherries. But James Wong on Twitter: "Plants cover their seeds in tasty fruity flesh to entice animals to scoff them & spread them in their droppings. This makes sense with apples and cherries. But](https://pbs.twimg.com/media/Dku_VBqWsAAwG_-.jpg:large)