Date:
- April 21, 2016
- Source:
- Cell Press
- Summary:
- When the dinosaurs became extinct, plenty of small
bird-like dinosaurs disappeared along with giants like Tyrannosaurus
and Triceratops. Why only some of them survived to become modern-day
birds remains a mystery. Now, researchers suggest that abrupt ecological
changes following a meteor impact may have been more detrimental to
carnivorous bird-like dinosaurs, and early modern birds with toothless
beaks were able to survive on seeds when other food sources declined.
A number of bird-like dinosaurs
reconstructed in their environment in the Hell Creek Formation at the
end of the Cretaceous. Middle ground and background: two different
dromaeosaurid species hunting vertebrate prey (a lizard and a toothed
bird). Foreground: hypothetical toothless bird closely related to the
earliest modern birds. Credit: Danielle Dufault
When the dinosaurs became extinct,
plenty of small bird-like dinosaurs disappeared along with giants like
Tyrannosaurus and Triceratops. Why only some of them survived to become
modern-day birds remains a mystery. Now, researchers reporting April 21
in Current Biology suggest that abrupt ecological changes
following a meteor impact may have been more detrimental to carnivorous
bird-like dinosaurs, and early modern birds with toothless beaks were
able to survive on seeds when other food sources declined.
"The small bird-like dinosaurs in the Cretaceous, the maniraptoran
dinosaurs, are not a well-understood group," says first author Derek
Larson, a paleontologist at the Philip J. Currie Dinosaur Museum in
Alberta and PhD candidate at the University of Toronto. "They're some of
the closest relatives to modern birds, and at the end of the
Cretaceous, many went extinct, including the toothed birds--but modern
crown-group birds managed to survive the extinction. The question is,
why did that difference occur when these groups were so similar?"
The team of researchers, which also included David Evans of the Royal
Ontario Museum and the University of Toronto and Caleb Brown of the
Royal Tyrrell Museum of Paleontology, began by investigating whether the
extinction at the end of the Cretaceous was an abrupt event or a
progressive decline simply capped off by the meteor impact. The fossil
record holds evidence to support both scenarios, depending on which
dinosaurs are being examined.
Delving into the bird-like dinosaurs, Larson collected data
describing 3,104 fossilized teeth from four different maniraptoran
families. Some were already published, but much of the information came
from Larson's own work at the microscope, cataloging the shape and size
of each tooth.
Larson and his colleagues were looking for patterns of diversity in
the teeth, which spanned 18 million years (up until the end of the
Cretaceous). If the variation between teeth decreased over time, the
team reasoned, this loss of diversity would indicate that the ecosystem
was declining and may have paralleled a long-term species loss. If the
teeth maintained their differences over time, however, that would
indicate a rich and stable ecosystem over millions of years and suggest
that these bird-like dinosaurs were abruptly killed off by an event at
the end of the Cretaceous.
In the end, the tooth data favored the latter interpretation. "The
maniraptoran dinosaurs maintained a very steady level of variation
through the last 18 million years of the Cretaceous," says Larson. "They
abruptly became extinct just at the boundary."
The team suspected that diet might have played a part in the survival
of the lineage that produced today's birds, and they used dietary
information and previously published group relationships from modern-day
birds to infer what their ancestors might have eaten. Working
backwards, Larson and his colleagues hypothesized that the last common
ancestor of today's birds was a toothless seed eater with a beak.
Coupled with the tooth data indicating an abrupt Cretaceous
extinction, the researchers suggest that a number of the lineages giving
rise to today's birds were those able to survive on seeds after the
meteor impact. The strike would have affected sun-dependent leaf and
fruit production in plants, but hardy seeds could have been a food
source until other options became available again.
"There were bird-like dinosaurs with teeth up until the end of the
Cretaceous, where they all died off very abruptly," says Larson. "Some
groups of beaked birds may have been able to survive the extinction
event because they were able to eat seeds."
Story Source:
The above post is reprinted from
materials provided by
Cell Press.
Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.
Journal Reference:
- Larson et al. Dental disparity and ecological stability in bird-like dinosaurs prior to the end-Cretaceous mass extinction. Current Biology, 2016 DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2016.03.039