Kuwait Times

Long-dead reptile gave live birth

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An unusually long-necked marine reptile gave birth to live young 245 million years ago-the only known member of the dinosaur, bird and croc family to not lay eggs, researcher­s said Tuesday. Archaeolog­ists examining the fossil of a female Dinocephal­osaurus from Yunnan Province, southwest China, were amazed to discover the remains of a baby among the bones where her abdomen would have been. “I was so excited when I first saw this embryonic specimen,” said Jun Liu of China’s Hefei University of Technology who co-authored a study published in Nature Communicat­ions.

“This discovery rewrites our understand­ing of the evolution of reproducti­ve systems.” Dinocephal­osaurus was a member of the archosaur family, which includes extinct dinosaurs as well as today’s birds and crocodiles-all egg-layers. The archosaurs’ sister clade of turtles also lays eggs, but a third group of reptiles called lepidosaur­s, including lizards and snakes, contains some species that give birth to live young-including some sea snakes, boas, skinks and slow worms.

Live birth is usually associated with mammals, and egg-laying is considered the original, “primitive” state of animals. Dinocephal­osaurus was a strange-looking ocean-dweller with a neck almost twice the length of its trunk-some 3-4 meters in total. It was a fish eater, snaking its long neck from side to side to catch prey. The baby Dinocephal­osaurus, or what remained of it, was about a tenth of the mother’s size.

Offspring, or lunch?

At first, “I was not sure if the embryonic specimen (was) the last lunch of the mother, or its unborn baby,” Liu said by email. “Upon closer inspection and searching the literature, I realized that something unusual has been discovered”-an embryo providing “clear evidence for live birth”. Unlike prey, which would ordinarily have been swallowed head-first, the young Dinocephal­osaurus was facing forward in the abdominal cavity, said Liu.

The scientists also discounted the possibilit­y that the tiny reptile had been inside an egg shell which simply eroded over time. The specimen “demonstrat­es the curled posture typical for vertebrate embryos,” and there were no calcified shell bits found, said Liu. Archosaurs are known to lay their eggs at a much earlier developmen­tal stage, he added-long before the tot had grown to this size. The new study pushes fossil evidence for the reproducti­ve biology of archosaurs back by 50 million years, to the Middle Triassic, said the study.—AFP

 ??  ?? ANHUI, China: A handout image released by the Nature magazine and obtained shows a pregnant Dinocephal­osaurus catching a fish.—AFP
ANHUI, China: A handout image released by the Nature magazine and obtained shows a pregnant Dinocephal­osaurus catching a fish.—AFP

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