Feisty mammal dined on
dinosaurs
Posted Jan. 13, 2005
Courtesy the American Museum of Natural History
and World Science staff
Scientists have long believed that the
first mammals, which lived at the time of the dinosaurs, were tiny, shy
creatures who lived in terror of the fearsome reptiles.
But scientists have unearthed
evidence to overturn that myth, they say – including the fossil of a mammal
with a little dinosaur in its stomach.
Two paleontologists from the
American Museum of Natural History and their colleagues studied a fossil of a
130-million-year-old opossum-sized mammal called Repenomamus robustus and
found the remains of a dinosaur called a psittacosaur in its stomach area.
This fossil, discovered in
China and described in a new paper in the journal Nature, is the first
direct evidence that some primitive mammals fed on small vertebrates, including
young dinosaurs, said Meng Jin and colleagues, the paper’s authors.
In the same paper, the team
also has described the fossil of a much larger and very close relative of the
psittacosaur eater, Repenomamos gigantus, which was the size of a small
dog—larger than some dinosaurs that lived in the same region of China at this
time.
Together, these two fossil
findings show that some mammals of the Mesozoic era (280 to 65 million years
ago, just before dinosaurs and numerous other animals became extinction) were
carnivores, the scientists said.
These mammals could also grow
to be much larger than previously thought, and competed with smaller dinosaurs
for food and land, said the researchers,
The dog-sized animal, Repenomamus
gigantus, is the largest known mammal ever found with fairly complete fossil
remains from the Mesozoic era, the researchers said. Although it resembled
no animal living today, it is somewhat comparable to a Tasmanian devil, a squat,
carnivorous marsupial that today lives only on the island of Tasmania, southeast
of Australia.
The fossil was discovered in
rock composed of volcanic and former riverbed sediments in northeastern
China’s Liaoning Province, where numerous well-preserved non-avian dinosaur
and bird fossils have been found in recent years. Most Mesozoic mammals
were the size of today’s mice and rats, weighing a few pounds at most and at a
major size disadvantage in the face of predatory dinosaurs.
However, a full-grown Repenomamus
gigantus probably weighed close to 30 pounds and could hold its own against
small dinosaurs, said the researchers.
The discovery of Repenomamus
gigantus’s size combined with the discovery of the Repenomamus robustus
fossil with the psittacosaur in its stomach recasts scientists’ understanding
of Mesozoic animals. It is now clear that an adult Repenomamus
could successfully take on a small or juvenile vertebrate, Meng and colleagues
said.
“This new evidence of larger
size and predatory, carnivorous behavior in early mammals is giving us a
drastically new picture of many of the animals that lived in the age of
dinosaurs,” Meng said.
A full-scale model of how
scientists think Repenomamus gigantus looked in life is being created for
a 700-square-foot diorama depicting a prehistoric forest and its inhabitants to
be featured in a new exhibition, Dinosaurs: Ancient Fossils, New
Discoveries, opening at the Museum on May 14, 2005.
The last meal of the Repenomamus
robustus was discovered in the fossil’s preparation process, which
involved painstakingly removing sediment surrounding the fossil. As the
work was under way, preparators made an extremely rare discovery, possibly the
first of its kind in a Mesozoic mammal—the animal’s stomach contents.
They were revealed as a patch
of small bones within the adult mammal’s ribcage near the vertebrae where the
stomach would be in living mammals. The bones turned out to be the limbs,
fingers, and teeth of a juvenile psittacosaur, a two-legged, parrot-beaked
plant-eating dinosaur that was common in the area of China where the fossil
mammal was found.
Adult psittacosaurs, with
short, deep heads, grew to be nearly six feet tall and had four-fingered
grasping hands. The baby psittacosaur found in this fossil was only 5
inches long, a third the size of the animal that ate it. Wear marks on its
teeth indicate it was not an embryo. Some of the psittacosaur’s long
bones were still connected to one another in the belly of the mammal, suggesting
that Repenomamus swallowed the psittacosaur in chunks.
Repenomamus robustus had
large, pointy incisors, canines, and premolars useful for catching, holding, and
ripping prey, further evidence that this group of primitive mammals ate meat as
well as plants. Its robust jawbones and deep pits on nearby bones suggest
that large muscles powered this mammal’s jaws. But its molars were small
and blunt. Along with the evidence of the psittacosaur chunks, the teeth
suggest that Repenomamus did not chew its food and that chewing evolved
further up the family tree of mammals. The teeth and jaw muscles also
suggest the animal was an aggressive predator, rather than a scavenger.
Prior to the discovery of Repenomamus
gigantus, Mesozoic mammals were thought to be primarily nocturnal
insect-eaters, limited to tiny meals due to their minuscule size. Scientists
hypothesized that these primitive mammals remained small because carnivorous and
herbivorous reptiles, already on the evolutionary scene, prevented mammals from
competing for the food and territory and evolving to become larger.
Mammals never got a good chance to grow larger, scientists thought, because
larger reptiles, including dinosaurs, lived longer, could move faster, and could
travel further to find food due to their size advantage.
The discovery of Repenomamus
gigantus calls these notions into question and shows that these large
Mesozoic mammals probably roamed just as widely as some of the small dinosaurs
with which they competed for food and territory, the researchers said.
When initially naming Repenomamus,
scientists combined the words reptile and mammal to refer to the curious shape
of these “reptile mammals.” The resemblance to reptiles can be seen in
their large, sharp, pointy teeth and short limbs that stick out from their
bodies at an angle. But their limb joints allowed more freedom of movement
than is typical in reptiles. In fact, their limbs were more mobile than
those of mammals such as the waddling platypuses. This additional freedom
of movement, such as is found among marsupials and other more advanced mammals,
helps carnivores compete for prey and elude predators.
Although Repenomamus probably could not run
fast, the scientists said, it could stand on its hindlimbs and walk effectively
enough to stalk small prey.
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