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1.
Science ; 375(6578): eabj7383, 2022 01 21.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35050650

RESUMEN

The analysis of dinosaur ecology hinges on the appropriate reconstruction and analysis of dinosaur biodiversity. Benson et al. question the data used in our analysis and our subsequent interpretation of the results. We address these concerns and show that their reanalysis is flawed. Indeed, when occurrences are filtered to include only valid taxa, their revised dataset strengthens our earlier conclusions.


Asunto(s)
Dinosaurios , Animales , Biodiversidad , Evolución Biológica , Dinosaurios/anatomía & histología , Ecología , Fósiles
2.
Science ; 371(6532): 941-944, 2021 Feb 26.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33632845

RESUMEN

Despite dominating biodiversity in the Mesozoic, dinosaurs were not speciose. Oviparity constrained even gigantic dinosaurs to less than 15 kg at birth; growth through multiple morphologies led to the consumption of different resources at each stage. Such disparity between neonates and adults could have influenced the structure and diversity of dinosaur communities. Here, we quantified this effect for 43 communities across 136 million years and seven continents. We found that megatheropods (more than 1000 kg) such as tyrannosaurs had specific effects on dinosaur community structure. Although herbivores spanned the body size range, communities with megatheropods lacked carnivores weighing 100 to 1000 kg. We demonstrate that juvenile megatheropods likely filled the mesocarnivore niche, resulting in reduced overall taxonomic diversity. The consistency of this pattern suggests that ontogenetic niche shift was an important factor in generating dinosaur community structure and diversity.


Asunto(s)
Biodiversidad , Dinosaurios , Animales , Variación Biológica Poblacional , Tamaño Corporal , Peso Corporal , Carnivoría , Dinosaurios/anatomía & histología , Dinosaurios/crecimiento & desarrollo , Fósiles , Herbivoria
3.
Anat Rec (Hoboken) ; 303(4): 1043-1059, 2020 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31967416

RESUMEN

Tyrannosaurus rex and other tyrannosaurid dinosaurs were apex predators during the latest Cretaceous, which combined giant size and advanced neurosensory systems. Computed tomography (CT) data have shown that tyrannosaurids had a trademark system of a large brain, large olfactory bulbs, elongate cochlear ducts, and expansive endocranial sinuses surrounding the brain and sense organs. Older, smaller tyrannosauroid relatives of tyrannosaurids developed some, but not all, of these features, raising the hypothesis that tyrannosaurid-style brains evolved before the enlarged tyrannosaurid-style sinuses, which might have developed only with large body size. This has been difficult to test, however, because little is known about the brains and sinuses of the first large-bodied tyrannosauroids, which evolved prior to Tyrannosauridae. We here present the first CT data for one of these species, Bistahieversor sealeyi from New Mexico. Bistahieversor had a nearly identical brain and sinus system as tyrannosaurids like Tyrannosaurus, including a large brain, large olfactory bulbs, reduced cerebral hemispheres, and optic lobes, a small tab-like flocculus, long and straight cochlear ducts, and voluminous sinuses that include a supraocciptal recess, subcondyar sinus, and an anterior tympanic recess that exits the braincase via a prootic fossa. When characters are plotted onto tyrannosauroid phylogeny, there is a two-stage sequence in which features of the tyrannosaurid-style brain evolved first (in smaller, nontyrannosaurid species like Timurlengia), followed by features of the tyrannosaurid-style sinuses (in the first large-bodied nontyrannosaurid tyrannosauroids like Bistahieversor). This suggests that the signature tyrannosaurid sinus system evolved in concert with large size, whereas the brain did not. Anat Rec, 303:1043-1059, 2020. © 2020 American Association for Anatomy.


Asunto(s)
Evolución Biológica , Tamaño Corporal , Dinosaurios/anatomía & histología , Cráneo/anatomía & histología , Animales , Fósiles , Filogenia , Cráneo/diagnóstico por imagen
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