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Shrinking
helped dinosaurs and birds to keep evolving
Date:
May 6, 2014
Source:
University of Oxford
Summary:
Although most dinosaurs went extinct 65 million years
ago, one dinosaur lineage survived and lives on today as a major evolutionary
success story -- the birds. A study that has 'weighed' hundreds of dinosaurs
suggests that shrinking their bodies may have helped the group that became
birds to continue exploiting new ecological niches throughout their evolution,
and become hugely successful today.
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Although most dinosaurs went extinct 65 million years ago,
one dinosaur lineage survived and lives on today as a major evolutionary
success story -- the birds.
A study that
has 'weighed' hundreds of dinosaurs suggests that shrinking their bodies may
have helped the group that became birds to continue exploiting new ecological
niches throughout their evolution, and become hugely successful today.
An
international team, led by scientists at Oxford University and the Royal
Ontario Museum, estimated the body mass of 426 dinosaur species based on the
thickness of their leg bones. The team found that dinosaurs showed rapid rates
of body size evolution shortly after their origins, around 220 million years
ago. However, these soon slowed: only the evolutionary line leading to birds
continued to change size at this rate, and continued to do so for 170 million
years, producing new ecological diversity not seen in other dinosaurs.
A report of
the research is published in PLOS Biology.
'Dinosaurs aren't
extinct; there are about 10,000 species alive today in the form of birds. We
wanted to understand the evolutionary links between this exceptional living
group, and their Mesozoic relatives, including well-known extinct species like T.
rex, Triceratops, and Stegosaurus,' said Dr Roger Benson of
Oxford University's Department of Earth Sciences, who led the study. 'We found
exceptional body mass variation in the dinosaur line leading to birds,
especially in the feathered dinosaurs called maniraptorans. These include
Jurassic Park's Velociraptor, birds, and a huge range of other forms,
weighing anything from 15 grams to 3 tonnes, and eating meat, plants, and more
omnivorous diets.'
The team
believes that small body size might have been key to maintaining evolutionary
potential in birds, which broke the lower body size limit of around 1 kilogram
seen in other dinosaurs.
'How do you
weigh a dinosaur? You can do it by measuring the thickness of its leg bones,
like the femur. This is quite reliable,' said Dr Nicolás Campione, of the
Uppsala University, a member of the team. 'This shows that the biggest dinosaur
Argentinosaurus, at 90 tonnes, was 6 million times the weight of the
smallest Mesozoic dinosaur, a sparrow-sized bird called Qiliania,
weighing 15 grams. Clearly, the dinosaur body plan was extremely versatile.'
The team
examined rates of body size evolution on the entire family tree of dinosaurs,
sampled throughout their first 160 million years on Earth. If close relatives
are fairly similar in size, then evolution was probably quite slow. But if they
are very different in size, then evolution must have been fast.
'What we
found was striking. Dinosaur body size evolved very rapidly in early forms,
likely associated with the invasion of new ecological niches. In general, rates
slowed down as these lineages continued to diversify,' said Dr David Evans at
the Royal Ontario Museum, who co-devised the project. 'But it's the sustained
high rates of evolution in the feathered maniraptoran dinosaur lineage that led
to birds -- the second great evolutionary radiation of dinosaurs.'
The
evolutionary line leading to birds kept experimenting with different, often
radically smaller, body sizes -- enabling new body 'designs' and adaptations to
arise more rapidly than among larger dinosaurs. Other dinosaur groups failed to
do this, got locked in to narrow ecological niches, and ultimately went
extinct. This suggest that important living groups such as birds might result
from sustained, rapid evolutionary rates over timescales of hundreds of
millions of years, which could not be observed without fossils.
'The fact
that dinosaurs evolved to huge sizes is iconic,' said team member Dr Matthew
Carrano of the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of Natural History.
'And yet we've understood very little about how size was related to their
overall evolutionary history. This makes it clear that evolving different sizes
was important to the success of dinosaurs.'
Story
Source:
The above
story is based on materials provided by University of Oxford. Note: Materials may be
edited for content and length.
Journal
Reference:
- Roger B. J. Benson, Nicolás E. Campione, Matthew T. Carrano, Philip D. Mannion, Corwin Sullivan, Paul Upchurch, David C. Evans. Rates of Dinosaur Body Mass Evolution Indicate 170 Million Years of Sustained Ecological Innovation on the Avian Stem Lineage. PLoS Biology, 2014; 12 (5): e1001853 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.1001853
Cite This
Page:
University of Oxford.
"Shrinking helped dinosaurs and birds to keep evolving."
ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 6 May 2014.
<www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/05/140506190736.htm>.