A South Dakota School of Mines & Technology assistant professor and
his team have discovered a new species of herbivorous dinosaur and today
published the first fossil evidence of prehistoric crocodyliforms
feeding on small dinosaurs.
Research by Clint Boyd, Ph.D., provides the first definitive evidence
that plant-eating baby ornithopod dinosaurs were a food of choice for
the crocodyliform, a now extinct relative of the crocodile family. While
conducting their research, the team also discovered that this dinosaur
prey was a previously unrecognized species of a small ornithopod
dinosaur, which has yet to be named.
The evidence found in what is now known as the Grand Staircase
Escalante-National Monument in southern Utah dates back to the late
Cretaceous period, toward the end of the age of dinosaurs, and was
published today in the online journal PLOS ONE. The complete
research findings of Boyd and Stephanie K. Drumheller, of the University
of Iowa and the University of Tennessee, and Terry A. Gates, of North
Carolina State University and the Natural History Museum of Utah, can be
accessed online (see journal reference below).
A large number of mostly tiny bits of dinosaur bones were recovered
in groups at four locations within the Utah park -- which
paleontologists and geologists know as the Upper Cretaceous (Campanian)
Kaiparowits Formation -- leading paleontologists to believe that
crocodyliforms had fed on baby dinosaurs 1-2 meters in total length.
Evidence shows bite marks on bone joints, as well as breakthrough
proof of a crocodyliform tooth still embedded in a dinosaur femur.
The findings are significant because historically dinosaurs have been
depicted as the dominant species. "The traditional ideas you see in
popular literature are that when little baby dinosaurs are either coming
out of a nesting grounds or out somewhere on their own, they are
normally having to worry about the theropod dinosaurs, the things like
raptors or, on bigger scales, the T. rex. So this kind of adds a new
dimension," Boyd said. "You had your dominant riverine carnivores, the
crocodyliforms, attacking these herbivores as well, so they kind of had
it coming from all sides."
Based on teeth marks left on bones and the large amounts of fragments
left behind, it is believed the crocodyliforms were also diminutive in
size, perhaps no more than 2 meters long. A larger species of
crocodyliform would have been more likely to gulp down its prey without
leaving behind traces of "busted up" bone fragments.
Until now, paleontologists had direct evidence only of "very large crocodyliforms" interacting with "very large dinosaurs."
"It's not often that you get events from the fossil record that are
action-related," Boyd explained. "While you generally assume there was
probably a lot more interaction going on, we didn't have any of that
preserved in the fossil record yet. This is the first time that we have
definitive evidence that you had this kind of partitioning, of your
smaller crocodyliforms attacking the smaller herbivorous dinosaurs," he
said, adding that this is only the second published instance of a
crocodyliform tooth embedded in any prey animal in the fossil record.
"A lot of times you find material in close association or you can
find some feeding marks or traces on the outside of the bone and you can
hypothesize that maybe it was a certain animal doing this, but this was
only the second time we have really good definitive evidence of a
crocodyliform feeding on a prey animal and in this case an ornithischian
dinosaur," Boyd said.
The high concentrations of tiny dinosaur bones led researchers to
conclude a type of selection occurred, that crocodyliforms were
preferentially feeding on these miniature dinosaurs. "Maybe it was
closer to a nesting ground where baby dinosaurs would have been more
abundant, and so the smaller crocodyliforms were hanging out there
getting a lunch," Boyd added.
"When we started looking at all the other bones, we starting finding
marks that are known to be diagnostic for crocodyliform feeding traces,
so all that evidence coming together suddenly started to make sense as
to why we were not finding good complete specimens of these little
ornithischian dinosaurs," Boyd explained. "Most of the bites marks are
concentrated around the joints, which is where the crocodyliform would
tend to bite, and then, when they do their pulling or the death roll
that they tend to do, the ends of the bones tend to snap off more often
than not in those actions. That's why we were finding these fragmentary
bones."
In the process of their research, the team discovered through
diagnostic cranial material that these baby prey are a new, as
yet-to-be-named dinosaur species. Details on this new species will soon
be published in another paper.

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