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Dental Disparity and Ecological Stability in Bird-like Dinosaurs (1 Viewer)

Fred Ruhe

Well-known member
Netherlands
Derek W. Larson, Caleb M. Brown & David C. Evans, 2016

Dental Disparity and Ecological Stability in Bird-like Dinosaurs prior to the End-Cretaceous Mass Extinction

Open Archive:
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2016.03.039 |
http://www.cell.com/current-biology/pdf/S0960-9822(16)30249-4.pdf
Current Biology 26, 1325–1333

SUMMARY:

The causes, rate, and selectivity of the end-Cretaceous mass extinction continue to be highly debated [1–5]. Extinction patterns in small, feathered maniraptoran dinosaurs (including birds) are important for understanding extant biodiversity and present an enigma considering the survival of crown group birds (Neornithes) and the extinction of their close kin across the end-Cretaceous boundary [6]. Because of the patchy Cretaceous fossil record of smallmaniraptorans [7–12], this important transition has not been closely examined in this group. Here, we test the hypothesis thatmorphological disparity in bird-like dinosaurs was decreasing leading up to the end-Cretaceous mass extinction, as has been hypothesized in some dinosaurs [13, 14]. To test this, we examined tooth morphology, an ecological indicator in fossil reptiles [15–19], from over 3,100 maniraptoran teeth from four groups (Troodontidae, Dromaeosauridae, Richardoestesia, and cf. Aves) across the last 18 million years of the Cretaceous. We demonstrate that tooth disparity, a proxy for variation in feeding ecology, shows no significant decline leading up to the extinction event within any of the groups. Tooth morphospace occupation also remains static over this time interval except for increased size during the early Maastrichtian. Our data provide strong support that extinction within this group occurred suddenly after a prolonged period of ecological stability. To explain this sudden extinction of toothed maniraptorans and the survival of Neornithes, we propose that diet may have been an extinction filter and suggest that granivory associated with an edentulous beak was a key ecological trait in the survival of some lineages.

News:

http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-36102018

Enjoy,

Fred
 
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