Search results for "Sauropodomorpha"

showing 4 items of 4 documents

2013

To estimate the body temperature (BT) of seven dinosaurs Gillooly, Alleen, and Charnov (2006) used an equation that predicts BT from the body mass and maximum growth rate (MGR) with the latter preserved in ontogenetic growth trajectories (BT-equation). The results of these authors evidence inertial homeothermy in Dinosauria and suggest that, due to overheating, the maximum body size in Dinosauria was ultimately limited by BT. In this paper, I revisit this hypothesis of Gillooly, Alleen, and Charnov (2006). I first studied whether BTs derived from the BT-equation of today’s crocodiles, birds and mammals are consistent with core temperatures of animals. Second, I applied the BT-equation to a …

MultidisciplinarybiologyExtant taxonEcologySauropodomorphaHomeothermyZoologyMaximum sizeBody sizeCore temperatureArchaeopteryxbiology.organism_classificationSauropodaPLOS ONE
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2013

Information on aging, maturation, and growth is important for understanding life histories of organisms. In extinct dinosaurs, such information can be derived from the histological growth record preserved in the mid-shaft cortex of long bones. Here, we construct growth models to estimate ages at death, ages at sexual maturity, ages at which individuals were fully-grown, and maximum growth rates from the growth record preserved in long bones of six sauropod dinosaur individuals (one indeterminate mamenchisaurid, two Apatosaurus sp., two indeterminate diplodocids, and one Camarasaurus sp.) and one basal sauropodomorph dinosaur individual (Plateosaurus engelhardti). Using these estimates, we e…

PaleontologyCamarasaurusMultidisciplinarybiologyApatosaurusPlateosaurusGompertz functionSauropodomorphaZoologySexual maturityMammalbiology.organism_classificationSauropodaPLOS ONE
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New skulls of the basal sauropodomorph Plateosaurus trossingensis from Frick, Switzerland: is there more than one species?

2021

The Triassic basal sauropodomorph Plateosaurus trossingensis is well-known from mass accumulations at the German localities of Trossingen and Halberstadt and the Swiss locality of Frick, and is significant especially regarding its ta-phonomy and proposed developmental plasticity. These implications, however, rely on the assumption that this material derives from a single species, which has been questioned. Here we describe new skull material from Frick including eight complete and six partial skulls, more than doubling the number of known skulls of P. trossingensis. This exceptional sample size allows for gaining a deeper understanding of variability that may occur in a single species. The …

inosauriabiologypreservationPlateosaurusPaleontologyAnatomybiology.organism_classificationTriassicdinosauriaskull ana-tomyskull anatomylcsh:GN282-286.7Basal (phylogenetics)SauropodomorphaGeographyontogenylcsh:Paleontologylcsh:Fossil man. Human paleontologyPlateosauruslcsh:QE701-760intraspecific variabilitySwitzerlandActa Palaeontologica Polonica
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Biology of the sauropod dinosaurs: the evolution of gigantism

2010

The herbivorous sauropod dinosaurs of the Jurassic and Cretaceous periods were the largest terrestrial animals ever, surpassing the largest herbivorous mammals by an order of magnitude in body mass. Several evolutionary lineages among Sauropoda produced giants with body masses in excess of 50 metric tonnes by conservative estimates. With body mass increase driven by the selective advantages of large body size, animal lineages will increase in body size until they reach the limit determined by the interplay of bauplan, biology, and resource availability. There is no evidence, however, that resource availability and global physicochemical parameters were different enough in the Mesozoic to ha…

long neck10253 Department of Small AnimalsPopulationZoology1100 General Agricultural and Biological SciencesBone and BonesGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyDinosaursSauropoda1300 General Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyAnimalsBody SizegigantismeducationDinosauriaMasticationPhylogenySauropodaphylogenetic heritageHerbivoreeducation.field_of_studyBone Development630 AgriculturebiologyFossilsEcologySauropodomorphaOriginal ArticlesSaurischiabiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionEctothermBasal metabolic rate570 Life sciences; biologyevolutionary innovationGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesMesozoic
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