Patagonian fossils show Jurassic dinosaur had the herd mentality
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[October 23, 2021]
By Will Dunham
(Reuters) - A vast trove of fossils
unearthed in Argentina's southern Patagonia region is offering the
oldest-known evidence that some dinosaurs thrived in a complex and
well-organized herd structure, with adults caring for the young and
sharing a communal nesting ground.
Scientists said on Thursday the fossils include more than 100 dinosaur
eggs and the bones of about 80 juveniles and adults of a Jurassic Period
plant-eating species called Mussaurus patagonicus, including 20
remarkably complete skeletons. The animals experienced a mass-death
event, probably caused by a drought, and their bodies were subsequently
buried by wind-blown dust, the researchers said.
"It is a pretty dramatic scene from 193 million years ago that was
frozen in time," said paleontologist Diego Pol of the Egidio Feruglio
Paleontological Museum in Trelew, Argentina, who led the research
published in the journal Scientific Reports.
Mussaurus, which grew to about 20 feet (6 meters) long and about 1.5
tons, possessed a long neck and tail, with a small head. It was bipedal
as an adult but newborns were quadrupedal. Mussaurus lived early in the
Jurassic, the second of three periods comprising the age of dinosaurs.
It was a relatively large beast for its time - much bigger than
contemporaneous meat-eating dinosaurs. Dinosaurs became true giants
later in the Jurassic.
"The site is one of a kind," Pol said. "It preserves a dinosaur nesting
ground including delicate and tiny dinosaur skeletons as well as eggs
with embryos inside. The specimens we have found showed that herd
behavior was present in long-necked dinosaurs since their early history.
These were social animals, and we think this may be an important factor
to explain their success."
The animals were found to have been grouped by age at the time of their
deaths, with hatchlings and eggs in one area while skeletons of
juveniles were clustered nearby. The eggs were arranged in layers within
trenches. Adults were found alone or in pairs.
This phenomenon, called "age segregation," signals a complex social
structure, the researchers said, including adults that foraged for meals
and cared for the young. The researchers suspect that members of the
herd returned to the same spot during successive seasons to form
breeding colonies.
"The young were staying with the adults at least until they reached
adulthood. It could be that they stayed in the same herd after reaching
adulthood, but we don't have information to corroborate that
hypothesis," said paleontologist and study co-author Vincent Fernandez
of the Natural History Museum in London.
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A nest of the Jurassic Period Patagonian plant-eating dinosaur
Mussaurus patagonicus with newborns and a parent is seen in an
undated artist's rendition. Jorge Gonzalez/Handout via REUTERS
Herd behavior also can protect young and vulnerable
individuals from attack by predators.
"It's a strategy for the survival of a species," Fernandez said.
The oldest previous evidence for dinosaur herd behavior was from
about 150 million years ago.
The nesting ground was situated on the dry margins of a lake
featuring ferns and conifers in a warm but seasonal climate. The
eggs are about the size of a chicken's, and the skeleton of a
hatchling fits in the palm of a human hand. The adults got as heavy
as a hippo.
A scanning method called high-resolution X-ray computed tomography
confirmed that the embryos inside the eggs indeed were of Mussaurus.
Mussaurus was a type of dinosaur called a sauropodomorph, which
represented the first great success story among herbivorous
dinosaurs. Sauropodomorphs were an evolutionary forerunner to a
group called sauropods known for long necks and tails and four
pillar-like legs.
The largest land animals in Earth's history were the sauropod
successors of sauropodomorphs, as exemplified by a later denizen of
Patagonia called Argentinosaurus that reached perhaps 118 feet (36
meters) in length and upwards of 70 tons.
(Reporting by Will Dunham in Washington, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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