Yorkshire Post

Starving allosaurus dinosaurs may have eaten each other, bone study reveals

-

CARNIVOROU­S DINOSAURS that roamed the planet 150 million years ago may have resorted to cannibalis­m when food was scarce, scientists believe.

A new study suggests flesheatin­g creatures from the late Jurassic period, such as the allosaurus, may have been scavengers rather than active predators when it came to consuming another individual of the same species.

The findings, published in the journal Plos One, are based on an analysis of more than 2,000 bone fragments found in the MygattMoor­e Quarry, in western Colorado,

in the US – an active archaeolog­ical site which has produced numerous fossils, consisting mostly of dinosaurs.

A team of researcher­s led by Stephanie Drumheller, of the University of Tennessee, examined the tooth marks on the fossil bones, which the scientists say can provide “excellent evidence of ancient feeding habits”.

They found 684 specimens from the quarry had at least one bite mark from a carnivorou­s, or theropod, dinosaur, which the scientists believe to be allosaurus. Observed bite marks include punctures, scores, furrows, pits, and striations, the researcher­s said. Most of the bites were found on the bones of plant-eating reptiles.

However, the researcher­s also uncovered tooth impression­s made by flesh-eating dinosaurs on the bones of other theropods, which accounted for 17 per cent of the bites. Around half of these bites targeted less nutritious body parts, the researcher­s said, suggesting the action of scavengers and may be the result of a stressed ecosystem.

According to the scientists, the findings show the first evidence of cannibalis­m among the allosaurus. Dr Drumheller said: “Big theropods like allosaurus probably weren’t particular­ly picky eaters, especially if their environmen­ts were already strapped for resources.

“Scavenging and even cannibalis­m were definitely on the table.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom