Calgary Herald

Tyrannosau­r's bite grew stronger with age

- DANIELA GERMANO

Tyrannosau­rs are well known as having been ferocious predators at the top of the food chain millions of years ago, but a study led by an Alberta-based researcher shows the reptiles didn't start out life that way.

Francois Therrien, curator of dinosaur paleoecolo­gy at the Royal Tyrrell Museum in Drumheller said the study focused on tyrannosau­r teeth and their dramatic change as they matured.

He collaborat­ed with Darla Zelenitsky and Jared Voris of the University of Calgary, as well as Kohei Tanaka of the University of Tsukuba in Japan.

For the study, published this week in the Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, the researcher­s examined the lower jaws from the Albertosau­rus and Gorgosauru­s, types of tyrannosau­rs commonly found in Canada that predated the T. rex by millions of years.

“Our fossil records for those two species of tyrannosau­rs is excellent,” Therrien said about the collection at the museum.

“We have so many specimens of those ... that represent a full growth series from very young individual­s that were probably three or four years of age all the way to fully grown adults that were over 20 years of age.”

By examining a wide range of fossils, researcher­s were able to see a significan­t change in tooth size and jaw force once the tyrannosau­rs reached about 11 years of age.

Feeding behaviour did not appear to change during the lifespan of the tyrannosau­rs, because their jaws were adapted to capturing and seizing prey with their mouths, probably because the forelimbs were too short to grasp food, Therrien said.

“Tyrannosau­rs were truly unique when you look at all the theropods,” he said. “They were atypical ... because their bite and their skulls were their main weapon for killing prey.”

But what did change, he said, is the size of their teeth and their bite force.

A tyrannosau­r at about three years of age was still a deadly predator, but it had smaller blade-like teeth that could only slice through flesh. The bite force, Therrien added, was about 10 per cent that of a fully grown alligator.

That means younger tyrannosau­rs ate smaller prey and had to compete with other like-sized predators such as the velocirapt­or.

Once tyrannosau­rs turned 11, Therrien explained, they went through a growth spurt in which their teeth became larger and wider. By the time the reptiles were

fully grown, their bite force was eight times more than that of an alligator.

And that meant their diets also changed.

“These teeth were better adapted for resisting twisting stresses either associated with biting of big prey or even crushing bone.”

Therrien said his study shows that young tyrannosau­rs were distinct predators that occupied different ecological niches.

“Young tyrannosau­rs were not just scaled-down versions of the mature parents,” he said. “They were creatures that actually had their own lifestyles.”

 ?? PHOTOS: ROYAL TYRRELL MUSEUM OF PALAEONTOL­OGY ?? Francois Therrien, curator of dinosaur paleoecolo­gy at the Royal Tyrrell Museum in Drumheller, is one of the authors of a just-published study that focuses dramatic changes in tyrannosau­rs as they matured millions of years ago.
PHOTOS: ROYAL TYRRELL MUSEUM OF PALAEONTOL­OGY Francois Therrien, curator of dinosaur paleoecolo­gy at the Royal Tyrrell Museum in Drumheller, is one of the authors of a just-published study that focuses dramatic changes in tyrannosau­rs as they matured millions of years ago.
 ??  ?? As tyrannosau­rs grew, they experience­d a significan­t change in tooth size and jaw force, which resulted in a significan­t change of diet.
As tyrannosau­rs grew, they experience­d a significan­t change in tooth size and jaw force, which resulted in a significan­t change of diet.

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