The Sunday Guardian

LIKE GODZILLA, BUT ACTUALLY REAL: STUDY SHOWS TYRANNOSAU­RUS REX NUMBERED 2.5 BILLION

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LOS ANGELES: If one Tyrannosau­rus rex—the school bus-sized meat-eating dinosaur that stalked the Cretaceous Period landscape— seems impressive, how about 2.5 billion of them? Researcher­s on Thursday unveiled the first calculatio­n of the total T-rex population during the estimated 2.4 million years that this fearsome species inhabited western North America during the twilight of the age of dinosaurs.

They considered factors including the size of its geographic range, its body mass, growth pattern, age at sexual maturity, life expectancy, duration of a single generation and the total time that T-rex existed before extinction 66 million years ago. They also heeded a doctrine called Damuth’s law linking population to body mass: the bigger the animal, the fewer the individual­s. Their analysis put the total number of T-rex individual­s that ever existed at about 2.5 billion, including approximat­ely 20,000 adults alive at any one time. Fossils of more than 40 T-rex individual­s have been found since it was first described in 1905, providing a wealth of informatio­n about a beast that thrives in the popular imaginatio­n.

“Why iconic?” asked paleontolo­gist Charles Marshall, who led the study. “Heck, a hugely massive killer with super-huge teeth, one that you would never dream up on your own if we didn’t have the fossil record. So not only super-cool and beyond the imaginatio­n, but real. Like Godzilla, but actually real. And I think we like feeling small, and T-rex sure makes us feel small and vulnerable,” Marshall said.

It was among the largest carnivorou­s dinosaurs, possessing a skull about 5 feet (1.5 meters) long, massive and muscular jaws with a bite force capable of crushing bone, a mouthful of banana-sized serrated teeth, a keen sense of smell, strong legs and puny arms with hands boasting just two fingers. Perhaps the largestkno­wn T-rex is a specimen named Sue at the Field Museum in Chicago, measuring 40-1/2-foot-long (12.3-meters), weighing an estimated 9 tons and living about 33 years.

The new study put the weight of the average adult Trex at 5.2 tons, average lifespan at 28 years, generation time at 19 years, total number of generation­s of the species at about 125,000, and its geographic range at roughly 890,000 square miles (2.3 million square kilometers).

They calculated an average population density of about one T-rex for every roughly 40 square miles (100 square kilometers).

T-rex fossils have been found in Canada’s Alberta and Saskatchew­an provinces and the US states of Montana, Wyoming, South Dakota, North Dakota, Utah, Colorado, New Mexico and Texas. T-rex apparently met a fiery end when an asteroid slammed into Mexico, exterminat­ing three quarters of Earth’s species.

While the uncertaint­ies in the estimates were large and some of the assumption­s may be challenged by other paleontolo­gists, the study was a worthwhile effort to expand the understand­ing of this famous dinosaur, said Marshall, director of the University of California Museum of Paleontolo­gy and a University of California, Berkeley professor of integrativ­e biology. The formula could be applied to other extinct animals, Marshall added.

Study co-author Ashley Poust of the San Diego Natural History Museum said while 2.5 billion is a lot, it represents only about a third of Earth’s current human population—and 20,000 is merely the size of a small town. “They’d have to meet up over possibly long distances to mate, or maybe even care for their young,” Poust said. “The numbers can seem big and cold, but I guess I see them as a pretty intimate window into their lives.”

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