Chinese fossil reveals evolution of skin in feathered dinosaurs
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[May 22, 2024]
By Will Dunham
(Reuters) - A new fossil of the Cretaceous Period dinosaur
Psittacosaurus, a dog-sized herbivore with a parrot-like beak, that was
donated to a Chinese university came with a surprise - one revealed only
after scientists viewed it under ultraviolet light.
It retained large patches of beautifully preserved skin, down to its
cellular structure, providing new insight into skin evolution in
feathered dinosaurs. The fossil points to "zoned development" in the
skin of these dinosaurs, researchers said, with Psittacosaurus and
probably other feathered dinosaurs possessing scaly, reptile-like skin
on body regions without feathers, with soft, bird-like skin on areas
with feathers.
"Initially we didn't really have much hope of finding any soft tissues
because, to the naked eye, our specimen appears to preserve only the
bones. We didn't give up, though, because we knew that during
fossilization soft tissues can be replaced by minerals, which may blend
in with the sediments," said Zixiao Yang, a postdoctoral researcher in
paleontology at University College Cork in Ireland and lead author of
the study published on Tuesday in the journal Nature Communications.
"When I turned on the UV light, I could feel my heart almost skip a
beat. Large patches of scaly skin, covering the chest and belly, were
glowing in a striking golden-yellow color under the UV. The fossil skin
looked really exquisite, covered by tiny, rounded scales of about one
millimeter wide," Yang said.
Fossils of any soft tissues are rare. Skin fossils of this quality are
rarer still.
Unearthed in northeastern China, the nearly complete fossil, dating to
roughly 130 million years ago, is of a juvenile Psittacosaurus
(pronounced SIT-ak-oh-sawr-us), about 2-1/4 feet (66 cm) long and
approximately 3 years old when it died. It was donated in 2021 to
Nanjing University from a private collection.
Psittacosaurus is an early member of the horned dinosaur lineage, called
ceratopsians, that later produced large beasts like Triceratops.
Psittacosaurus itself lacked horns. Its name means "parrot lizard" based
on its protruding beak, adapted for eating plants.
Many dinosaurs had feathers. In fact, birds evolved from small feathered
dinosaurs. The first rudimentary feathers are thought to have evolved
from reptilian scales nearly 250 million years ago in animals ancestral
to dinosaurs and the flying reptiles called pterosaurs.
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A handout image, formed by combining different images, shows a
dog-sized fossil of the Cretaceous Period dinosaur Psittacosaurus
from China, the upper half of the image is displayed in natural
light, and the lower half in UV light, revealing the orange-yellow
fluorescence of fossilised skin, in this undated handout image.
Zixiao Yang/Handout via REUTERS
Psittacosaurus had simple, bristle-like feathers atop its tail. The
rest of its body was covered by scaly skin. The fossil did not have
skin from the dinosaur's feathered regions, but the researchers
think these areas had bird-like skin.
"This discovery adds nuance to our understanding of feather
evolution. The acquisition of modern, bird-like skin happened only
locally on the body. Tough, reptile-style skin remained essential in
body regions not protected by feathers," said University College
Cork paleontology professor and study co-author Maria McNamara.
The skin of birds exhibits multiple adaptations for feathers.
Birds have a dermal network of microscopic muscles that encircles
each feather and acts like a hydraulic system, including muscles
that pull feathers in different directions. There also is a network
of smooth muscles under the skin that keeps feathers separated, as
well as deposits of fatty tissue anchored to the base of the skin
that create an even skin surface and feather orientation. In
addition, feathers are connected by a system of sensory nerve
fibers.
"Until now, we haven't known whether the skin of dinosaurs and their
relatives evolved these skin adaptations first and feathers later,
or whether they evolved at the same time, and in which parts of the
body," McNamara said.
The Psittacosaurus fossil "strongly suggests that evolution of
feathers - and the new skin adaptations - happened at the same
time," McNamara said.
The dinosaur's scaly skin closely resembled the skin of today's
reptiles.
"They are similar in many aspects, including the shape, size,
arrangement and composition of skin cells, and the way the skin
produces color patterns," Yang said.
(Reporting by Will Dunham in Washington; Editing by Daniel Wallis)
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