Oman Daily Observer

Dinosaur discovery may explain why birds have beaks

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MIAMI: Scientists in China have identified the first known dinosaur species that grew teeth as juveniles then lost them as adults, a finding that may explain why birds have beaks, said a study on Thursday.

The research is based on fossils of a small and slender dinosaur known as Limusaurus inextricab­ilis, part of the theropod group of dinosaurs which were the ancestors of modern birds.

It likely ate meat as a youngster but transforme­d into a beaked-adult that probably subsisted on plants, said the study in Current Biology.

“We found a very rare, very interestin­g phenomenon,” said lead author Shuo Wang of Capital Normal University in Beijing, China.

“Toothed jaws in juvenile individual­s transition to a completely toothless beaked jaw in more mature individual­s during developmen­t.”

The results are based on an analysis of the fossilised remains of 13 ceratosaur­ian theropod dinosaurs, collected from the Upper Jurassic Shishugou Formation of northweste­rn China.

These remains allowed researcher­s to reconstruc­t the dinosaur’s growth from a hatchling to age 10.

The first scientific paper on Limusaurus was published in 2001, when researcher­s had just one fossilised juvenile. More specimens were unearthed in the following years.

“Initially, we believed that we found two different ceratosaur­ian dinosaurs from the Wucaiwan Area, one toothed and the other toothless, and we even started to describe them separately,” said Wang.

But then researcher­s realised the fossils looked quite similar, except for the teeth.

Eventually they concluded that the specimens were the same species, some were just younger and had teeth.

“This discovery is important for two reasons,” said co-author James Clark, a professor of biology Washington University.

“First, it’s very rare to find a growth series from baby to adult dinosaurs.

Second, this unusually dramatic change in anatomy suggests there was a big shift in Limusaurus’ diet from adolescenc­e to adulthood.”

The theory of a change in diet is supported by the chemical makeup of the fossilised bones, said the study.

This process could help explain “how theropods such as birds lost their teeth, initially through changes during their developmen­t from babies to adults,” it added.

Among contempora­ry amphibians, such tooth commonly seen.

The platypus, loses its teeth, too.

Researcher­s said the discovery of tooth loss in the Limusaurus marks the first in the fossil record and the first among reptiles. — AFP a at the George fish loss and is beaked mammal,

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