Tuesday, 24 January 2012

Oldest dinosaur nursery found

Oldest dinosaur nursery found

Oldest dinosaur nursery found, Researchers say they have found the oldest dinosaur nursery  predating known sites by 100 million years.  The site contains 10 nests holding up to 34 eggsand tiny prints from baby dinosaurs, researchers say.

The extraordinary site, described in the latest Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, includes multiple dinosaur nests, eggs, hatchlings and the remains of adults for this species, Massospondylus.

Project leader Robert Reisz, a professor of biology at the University of Toronto Mississauga, told Discovery News that the dinosaur was herbivorous. Like its sauropod relatives, it had a very small head and an extremely long neck. The hatchlings walked on all fours, but adults were bipedal.

“The transition from four legs to two during an individual’s lifetime is a very unusual growth pattern that we rarely see in animals, but we do see it in humans,” Reisz said. “The largest articulated skeleton of this animal was about 6 meters (19.7 feet) in length, but they probably grew even larger.”

The discovery provides evidence for “nesting site fidelity,” according to Reisz, “as it looks like these dinosaurs liked this place and returned to it repeatedly to lay their eggs.”

It’s also the oldest evidence in the fossil record for a highly organized nest, with eggs carefully laid in a single layer.

Reisz said clues about the nest are difficult to interpret, but what’s known so far is that “the nests seem to be fairly shallow because all the eggs are in one layer,” he said. “We do not know if the nests were covered by vegetation or if they were buried because the nature of the sediments preclude the preservation of plant fossil remains. It is quite possible that the mother guarded the nests.”

Nest guarding today is fairly common among living reptiles, such as crocodiles. It’s also now known “that the hatchlings stayed around the nesting area long enough to at least grow to double in size.”

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The researchers believe each Massospondylus mother laid a lot of small eggs, at least 35, which was a probable survival strategy.

“There were large and small meat-eating theropod dinosaurs around at the time Massospondylus lived,” Evans told Discovery News. “The smaller, more agile predator called Coelophysis, was much smaller than adult Massospondylus, but would have been a threat to the hatchlings and juveniles.”

So far, the researchers have found 10 dinosaur nests at the site, but they suspect many more are still embedded within the South African cliff. They predict many other nests will be eroded out in time, as the natural weathering process continues.

One close-up of a Massospondylus embryonic skeleton reveals that the head was pushed out of the egg after death. The scientists suspect gases produced by decay caused this to happen. They also think the site was so well preserved because the dinosaur moms chose to lay their eggs in what was then, back in the Early Jurassic Period, a wet spot at the edge of a river.

Reisz explained, “Periodically there was an unusually wet season and this area was flooded, drowning the unhatched eggs and embryos, and covering the nests with very fine sediment. Yet this turned out not to be such a horrible disaster for paleontologists.”

South Africa appears to have been a hotspot for Massospondylus, with other possible nesting sites for this dinosaur probably in existence. So far, however, the one at Golden Gate Highlands National Park is the only nursery to yield complete clutches, with eggs containing embryos, Evans said.

He added that similar evidence for large-scale nesting among dinosaurs exists, for dinos such as duck bills and sauropods, but that evidence is about 100 million years younger than this South African site.

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he discovery provides the world’s oldest clear evidence for baby dinosaur footprints at a nesting site. Handprints as well as other excavated baby prints indicate that the infants stayed near the nest site after hatching and walked on all four limbs at first.

Reisz said, “The overall body shape of the hatchlings with a large, toothless head, relatively long neck, and general look of helplessness suggests that parental care was very likely in Massospondylus. We think that the mother may have guarded the nest and the hatchlings, but may have also fed the babies with plant material.”

The paleontologists are now in the process of testing this hypothesis by preparing more embryos from different nests, to see if any of them have teeth. This ongoing research would be the first study of different embryological stages in a dinosaur


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