Monster swallows monster: Fossil reveals doubly fatal Triassic encounter
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[August 21, 2020]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - In a warm shallow
sea about 240 million years ago in what is now southwestern China, a
large dolphin-like marine reptile attacked and swallowed an almost
equally big lizard-like marine reptile in a savage encounter that left
both beasts dead.
Scientists on Thursday described a fossil unearthed in China's Guizhou
Province that reveals this Triassic Period drama in exceptional detail
and changes the understanding of "megapredation" in prehistoric seas.
While it long has been presumed that large apex predators preyed upon
other big animals - megapredation is defined as feeding on prey of human
size or larger - the Chinese fossil represents the first direct evidence
of it, as demonstrated by a prehistoric animal's stomach contents.
The fossil shows the skeleton of a 15-foot-long (5 meters)
Guizhouichthyosaurus, a type of marine reptile called an ichthyosaur.
Its body design married elements of a dolphin and a tiger shark though
it lacked a dorsal fin, also boasting four strong flippers and a mouth
full of powerful but blunt teeth.
Inside its stomach was the torso of a 12-foot-long (4 meters)
Xinpusaurus, a type of marine reptile called an a thalattosaur. Its body
design resembled a komodo dragon with four paddling limbs and teeth
equipped for crushing shells. The Xinpusaurus was beheaded in the melee
and its tail severed.
"Nobody was there to film it," but it is possible to interpret what may
have occurred between the two animals, said paleobiologist and study
co-author Ryosuke Motani of the University of California, Davis.
The Guizhouichthyosaurus literally may have bitten off more than it
could chew.
"The prey is lighter than the predator but its resistance must have been
fierce," Motani said. "The predator probably damaged its neck to some
extent while subduing the prey. Then it took the head and tail of the
prey off through jerking and twisting, and swallowed the trunk using
inertia and gravity."
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The strong blunt teeth of the ichthyosaur Guizhouichthyosaurus,
unearthed in China's Guizhou province, is seen in this undated
picture released on August 20, 2020. The broken white line indicates
the approximate gum line of the upper jaw. Da-Yong Jiang, et al,
iScience/Handout via REUTERS
Motani added, "These activities may have expanded the damage of the
neck to the point it was fatal. The neck vertebral columns of these
ichthyosaurs are quite narrow and once they could not hold the skull
in place anymore, the predator could not breathe. Soon, it died not
far from the site of the predation, where the detached tail of the
prey lay."
The fossil bore evidence of this broken neck. The prey in the
stomach showed little signs of digestion, indicating the ichthyosaur
died soon after swallowing it.
It is among the more dramatic fossils on record, joining others such
as one showing the Cretaceous Period dinosaurs Velociraptor and
Protoceratops locked in combat and another of the large Cretaceous
fish Xiphactinus that had swallowed whole another sizeable fish.
Guizhouichthyosaurus was the largest-known marine predator of its
time, about 10 million years before dinosaurs appeared. Its teeth,
however, were not the type thought to be needed for megapredation:
blunt rather than having cutting edges for slicing flesh.
"Its teeth look like they are good for grasping squids. So, it was a
surprise to find such large prey," said Peking University
paleontologist Da-Yong Jiang, lead author of the research published
in the journal iScience.
Motani noted that crocodilians also have blunt teeth and attack
large prey.
"Megapredation," Motani said, "was probably more common than we used
to think."
(Reporting by Will Dunham; Editing by Sandra Maler)
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