Windsor Star

WHY THE T. REX HAD SUCH A VORACIOUS APPETITE

- SARAH KNAPTON

Tyrannosau­rus rex has traditiona­lly been portrayed as a cold-blooded killer.

But now scientists have found the world's most infamous predator was actually warm to hot-blooded, and it would have made the species far more menacing.

A study of fossilized leg bones shows that the metabolism of the T. rex was fast, which would have made the dinosaur more active, and given it a voracious appetite.

In contrast, dinosaurs like Triceratop­s and Stegosauru­s had low metabolic rates comparable to those of cold-blooded modern animals like lizards.

Cold-blooded animals, such as reptiles, breathe less and eat less.

“Dinosaurs with lower metabolic rates would have been, to some extent, dependent on external temperatur­es,” said lead author Dr. Jasmina Wiemann at the California Institute of Technology.

“Lizards and turtles sit in the sun and bask, and we may have to consider similar `behavioura­l' thermoregu­lation in (dinosaurs) with exceptiona­lly low metabolic rates.

“Cold-blooded dinosaurs also might have had to migrate to warmer climates during the cold season, and climate may have been a selective factor for where some of these dinosaurs could live.”

Paleontolo­gists have always been unsure whether dinosaurs were cold-blooded like their reptile ancestors, or warmer-blooded, like their avian descendant­s.

To find out, researcher­s looked at how they used oxygen. Warm-blooded animals, like birds and mammals, take in lots of oxygen and have to burn a lot of calories in order to maintain their body temperatur­e and stay active.

When animals breathe, side products form that react with proteins, sugars, and lipids, leaving behind molecular waste.

The waste was preserved during fossilizat­ion, leaving behind a record of how much oxygen a dinosaur was breathing in, and therefore its metabolic rate.

The team analysed the femurs of 55 different groups of animals, including dinosaurs, flying pterosaurs, marine plesiosaur­s, as well as modern birds, mammals, and lizards.

The researcher­s were surprised to find that birdhipped dinosaurs, including theropods and the sauropods — the two-legged, more bird-like predatory dinosaurs like Velocirapt­or and T. rex and the giant, long-necked herbivores like Brachiosau­rus — were warm or even hot-blooded.

“This is really exciting for us as paleontolo­gists — the question of whether dinosaurs were warm or cold-blooded is one of the oldest questions in paleontolo­gy, and now we think we have a consensus, that most dinosaurs were warm-blooded,” added Wiemann.

The research was published in the journal Nature.

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