New perspectives on body size and shape evolution in dinosaurs.

IF 11 1区 生物学 Q1 BIOLOGY
Matthew Dempsey, Samuel R R Cross, Susannah C R Maidment, John R Hutchinson, Karl T Bates
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Abstract

Diversity in the body shapes and sizes of dinosaurs was foundational to their widespread success during the Mesozoic era. The ability to quantify body size and form reliably is therefore critical to the study of dinosaur biology and evolution. Body mass estimates for any given fossil animal are, in theory, most informative when derived from volumetric models that account for the three-dimensional shapes of the entire body. In addition to providing estimates of total body mass, volumetric approaches can be used to determine the inertial properties of specific body segments and the overall distribution of mass throughout the body, each of which are essential for the modelling and interpretation of form-function relationships and their associations with ecology. However, the determination of body volumes in fossil taxa is often subjective, and may be sensitive to varied artistic inference. This highlights the need for an approach to body mass estimation in which body segment volumes are systematically constrained by quantitative scaling relationships between the hard tissues that fossilise and the soft tissues only observable in extant taxa. To this end, we used recently published skeletal to soft tissue volumetric scaling factors derived from CT data of extant sauropsids to estimate body segment mass properties from skeletal models of 52 non-avian dinosaurs representing the majority of major clades and body plans. The body masses estimated by this study range from less than 200 g in the tiny avialan Yixianornis to over 60 tonnes in the giant sauropod Patagotitan, which is currently the largest dinosaur known from mostly complete skeletal remains. From our models, we infer that many previous reconstructions of soft tissue envelopes may be too small, and that many dinosaurs were therefore heavier than previous estimates. Our models generally overlap with the range of body mass estimates derived from limb bone shaft dimensions, but with considerable quantitative variability among major clades. This suggests that different taxa either differed in skeletal to soft tissue volume ratios, or that their limb bone dimensions varied relative to body mass, perhaps related to differences in locomotor dynamics and postural evolution. Our models also allowed us to investigate variation in mass distribution and body proportions across different dinosaurs from a perspective grounded in extant anatomical data, framing long-standing hypotheses about their form, function, and behaviour in a quantitative context. For example, reconstructed disparity in whole-body centres of mass reflects a broad array of postures in different dinosaur clades, while the lack of strong positive allometry in the dimensions of the weight-bearing limb segments relative to total body mass corroborates previous studies suggesting an overall decrease in dinosaur locomotor performance as body size increased.

恐龙体型和形状进化的新观点。
恐龙身体形状和大小的多样性是它们在中生代广泛成功的基础。因此,可靠地量化身体大小和形态的能力对恐龙生物学和进化的研究至关重要。从理论上讲,对任何给定的化石动物的体重估计,当从考虑整个身体三维形状的体积模型中得出时,信息量最大。除了提供总体质量的估计外,体积法还可用于确定特定身体部位的惯性特性和整个身体的总体质量分布,这对于建模和解释形式-功能关系及其与生态学的关联都是必不可少的。然而,化石分类群中身体体积的确定往往是主观的,并且可能对各种艺术推断很敏感。这突出了需要一种体重估计方法,其中身体部分体积系统地受到化石硬组织与仅在现有分类群中可观察到的软组织之间的定量缩放关系的限制。为此,我们使用了最近发表的骨骼到软组织的体积比例因子,这些因子来自于现存蜥脚类恐龙的CT数据,以估计52种非鸟类恐龙的骨骼模型的身体部分质量特性,这些恐龙代表了大多数主要分支和身体计划。这项研究估计的体重范围从小型鸟类翼鸟的不到200克到巨型蜥脚类恐龙Patagotitan的超过60吨,这是目前已知的最大的恐龙,大部分骨骼遗骸都是完整的。从我们的模型中,我们推断出许多以前重建的软组织膜可能太小了,因此许多恐龙比以前估计的要重。我们的模型通常与由四肢骨轴尺寸得出的体重估计范围重叠,但在主要进化支之间存在相当大的数量差异。这表明不同的类群要么在骨骼与软组织的体积比上存在差异,要么它们的肢骨尺寸相对于身体质量存在差异,这可能与运动动力学和姿势进化的差异有关。我们的模型还允许我们从现有解剖学数据的角度研究不同恐龙的质量分布和身体比例的变化,在定量的背景下构建关于它们的形式、功能和行为的长期假设。例如,重建的全身质量中心的差异反映了不同恐龙分支的广泛姿势,而负重肢节相对于总质量的尺寸缺乏强的正异速,这证实了先前的研究,即恐龙的运动性能随着体型的增加而整体下降。
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来源期刊
Biological Reviews
Biological Reviews 生物-生物学
CiteScore
21.30
自引率
2.00%
发文量
99
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Biological Reviews is a scientific journal that covers a wide range of topics in the biological sciences. It publishes several review articles per issue, which are aimed at both non-specialist biologists and researchers in the field. The articles are scholarly and include extensive bibliographies. Authors are instructed to be aware of the diverse readership and write their articles accordingly. The reviews in Biological Reviews serve as comprehensive introductions to specific fields, presenting the current state of the art and highlighting gaps in knowledge. Each article can be up to 20,000 words long and includes an abstract, a thorough introduction, and a statement of conclusions. The journal focuses on publishing synthetic reviews, which are based on existing literature and address important biological questions. These reviews are interesting to a broad readership and are timely, often related to fast-moving fields or new discoveries. A key aspect of a synthetic review is that it goes beyond simply compiling information and instead analyzes the collected data to create a new theoretical or conceptual framework that can significantly impact the field. Biological Reviews is abstracted and indexed in various databases, including Abstracts on Hygiene & Communicable Diseases, Academic Search, AgBiotech News & Information, AgBiotechNet, AGRICOLA Database, GeoRef, Global Health, SCOPUS, Weed Abstracts, and Reaction Citation Index, among others.
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