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Immature skull led
young tyrannosaurs
to rely on
speed, agility to
catch prey
New
study suggests range
of feeding
strategies for
juvenile, adult
predators

ATHENS, Ohio (May 9,
2011)—While
adult tyrannosaurs
wielded power and
size to kill large
prey, youngsters
used agility to hunt
smaller game.
“It’s one of the
secrets of success
for tyrannosaurs—the
different age groups
weren’t competing
with each other for
food because their
diets shifted as
they grew,” said
Ohio University
paleontologist
Lawrence Witmer.
Witmer is part of an
international team
of scientists from
Japan, Mongolia and
the United States
that analyzed the
youngest and
most-complete known
skull for any
species of
tyrannosaur,
offering a new view
of the growth and
feeding strategies
of these fearsome
predators. The
70-million-year-old
skull comes from a
very young
individual of the
Mongolian dinosaur
species known as
Tarbosaurus bataar,
the closest known
relative of T.
rex.
The analysis of the
11.4-inch skull,
published in the
Journal of
Vertebrate
Paleontology,
revealed changes in
skull structure that
suggest that young
tyrannosaurs had a
different lifestyle
than adults.
“We knew that adult
Tarbosaurus
were a lot like
T. rex,” said
lead author Takanobu
Tsuihiji, a former
Ohio University
postdoctoral fellow
who is now a
postdoctoral
researcher at the
National Museum of
Nature and Science
in Tokyo. “Adults
show features
throughout the skull
associated with a
powerful bite…large
muscle attachments,
bony buttresses,
specialized teeth.
The juvenile is so
young that it
doesn’t really have
any of these
features yet, and so
it must have been
feeding quite
differently from its
parents.”
The skull was found
as part of an almost
complete skeleton,
missing only the
neck and a portion
of the tail. Based
on careful analysis
of the
microstructure of
the legs bones,
co-author Andrew Lee
of Ohio University
(now at Midwestern
University)
estimated that the
juvenile was only 2
to 3 years old when
it died. It was
about 9 feet in
total length, about
3 feet high at the
hip and weighed
about 70 pounds. In
comparison,
Tarbosaurus
adults were 35 to 40
feet long, 15 feet
high, weighed about
6 tons and probably
had a life
expectancy of about
25 years, based on
comparison with
T. rex.
“This little guy may
have been only 2 or
3, but it was no
toddler…although it
does give new
meaning to the
phrase ‘terrible
twos,’” said Witmer,
Chang Professor of
Paleontology at the
Ohio University
College of
Osteopathic
Medicine. “We don’t
know to what extent
its parents were
bringing it food,
and so it was
probably already a
pretty capable
hunter. Its skull
wasn’t as strong as
the adult’s, and
would have had to
have been a more
careful hunter,
using quickness and
agility rather than
raw power.”
The different
hunting strategies
of juveniles and
adults may have
reduced competition
among Tarbosaurus
and strengthened
their role as the
dominant predators
of their
environment.
“The juvenile skull
shows that there
must have a change
in dietary niches as
the animals got
older,” Tsuihiji
said. “The younger
animals would have
taken smaller prey
that they could
subdue without
risking damage to
their skulls,
whereas the older
animals and adults
had progressively
stronger skulls that
would have allowed
taking larger, more
dangerous prey.”
The late Cretaceous
environment offered
plenty of options
for prey.
“Tarbosaurus
is found in the same
rocks as giant
herbivorous
dinosaurs like the
long-necked sauropod
Opisthocoelicaudia
and the duckbill
hadrosaur
Saurolophus,”
said Mahito Watabe
of the Hayashibara
Museum of Natural
Sciences in Okayama,
who led the
expedition to
Mongolia in 2006
that uncovered the
new skull. “But the
young juvenile
Tarbosaurus
would have hunted
smaller prey,
perhaps something
like the bony-headed
dinosaur
Prenocephale.”
The juvenile skull
also is important
because it helps
clarify the identity
of small,
potentially juvenile
specimens of other
tyrannosaur species
previously found.
“The beauty of our
new young skull is
that we absolutely
know for many good
reasons that it’s
Tarbosaurus,”
Witmer said. “We can
use this known
growth series to get
a better sense of
whether some of
these more
controversial finds
grew up to be
Tarbosaurus,
Tyrannosaurus or
some other species.”
Other authors on the
article include
Khishigjav
Tsogtbaatar and
Rinchen Barsbold of
the Mongolian
Paleontological
Center; Takehisa
Tsubamoto, Shigeru
Suzuki and Yasuhiro
Kawahara of the
Hayashibara
Biochemical
Laboratories; and
Ryan Ridgely of the
WitmerLab at Ohio
University. The
research was funded
by grants to
Tsuihiji from the
Japan Society of
Promotion of Science
and to Witmer and
Ridgely from the
U.S. National
Science Foundation.
The field work was
supported by the
Hayashibara Company
Limited, Olympus,
Mitsubishi Motor
Company and
Panasonic.
Editors:
Related images and
animations created
by the WitmerLab can
be downloaded here:
http://www.oucom.ohiou.edu/dbms-witmer/Tarbosaurus_skull.htm.
A fact sheet can be
accessed here:
http://www.oucom.ohiou.edu/dbms-witmer/juvenile_tyrannosaur/Juvenile_tyrannosaur_facts_and_graphics.pdf.
Contacts:
1. USA (Eastern
Daylight Savings
time): Lawrence
Witmer, (740)
593-9489 and (740)
591-7712,
witmerL@ohio.edu.
2. Japan: Takanobu
Tsuihiji, National
Museum of Nature and
Science, Tokyo,
Japan,
taka@kahaku.go.jp;
+81-3-3364-2311 Ext.
7238. Mahito Watabe,
Hayashibara Museum
of Natural Sciences,
Okayama, Japan,
moldavicum@pa2.so-net.ne.jp,
+81-86-224-4311.
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