Nelson Mail

Giant plant-eaters co-existed with dinosaurs

-

A giant, plant-eating creature with a beak-like mouth and reptilian features may have roamed the Earth during the late Triassic period more than 200 million years ago, scientists said yesterday.

In a paper published by the journal Science, Polish researcher­s claim their find overturns the notion that the only giant planteater­s at the time were dinosaurs.

The elephant-sized creature, known as Lisowicia bojani after a village in southern Poland where its remains were found, belonged to the same evolutiona­ry branch as mammals.

Similar fossils from so-called dicynodont­s have been found elsewhere, but they were dated to be from an earlier period, before a series of natural disasters wiped out most species on Earth.

‘‘We used to think that after the end-Permian extinction, mammals and their relatives retreated to the shadows while dinosaurs rose up and grew to huge sizes,’’ said Grzegorz Niedzwiedz­ki, a paleontolo­gist at Uppsala University in Sweden who coauthored the paper.

The discovery of giant dicynodont­s living at the same time as sauropods — a branch of the dinosaur family that later produced the iconic long-necked diplodocus — suggests environmen­tal factors in the late Triassic period may have driven the evolution of gigantism, the researcher­s said.

Christian Kammerer, a dicynodont specialist at the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences not involved in the find, said the size of Lisowicia was ‘‘startling.’’

‘‘Large dicynodont­s have been known before in both the Permian and the Triassic, but never at this scale,’’ he said.

Kammerer said that while dicynodont­s and dinosaurs existed at the same time, there’s no evidence yet that they lived in the same habitats.

He also questioned the study’s conclusion­s about Lisowicia’s posture

‘‘However, overall I think this is a very intriguing and important paper, and shows us that there is a still a lot left to learn about early mammal relatives in the Triassic,’’ said Kammerer.

 ?? AP ?? People uncover a fossil of a plant-eating creature with a beak-like mouth and reptilian features in Lisowicia, Poland.
AP People uncover a fossil of a plant-eating creature with a beak-like mouth and reptilian features in Lisowicia, Poland.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand