Khaleej Times

Bird-like dinosaurs hatched eggs like chickens

- AFP

paris — Feathered dinosaurs that walked on two legs and had parrotlike beaks shared another characteri­stic with modern birds — they brooded clutches of eggs at a temperatur­e similar to chickens, a study showed on Wednesday.

Ostrich-sized oviraptors, ancestors to birds, sat on their eggs to incubate them at 35 to 40 degrees Celsius (95 to 104 degrees Fahrenheit) — a range comparable with modern hens (37.5 C), researcher­s reported in the journal Palaeontol­ogy.

A team from China and France measured oxygen atoms from the shells and embryo bones of seven oviraptor eggs from the Upper Cretaceous period some 100 to 66 million years ago.

The analysis revealed the temperatur­e at which the embryo was forming during its incubation, explained study co-author Romain Amiot, a paleontolo­gist at France’s CNRS research institute.

Amiot and a team used the eggs of oviraptors because they are known to have been egg brooders. Several fossilised adult oviraptors have been found in a brooding posture on clutches of eggs.

In fact, this is how the creature got its Latin name — unfairly — of oviraptosa­ur, meaning “egg thief lizard”.

The first specimen was discovered in 1924 on top of a nest full of eggs, leading palaeontol­ogists to assume the creature was eating them when it died.

But later finds revealed the eggs in fact contained baby oviraptors, meaning that the lurking lizard was not a predator but a caring parent tending its nest.

Whether dinosaurs were warmor cold-blooded has been a longstandi­ng scientific riddle.

In 2015, a study suggested they were neither, but something inbetween. Dinosaurs were probably able to produce internal heat and raise their body temperatur­e, but not maintain it at a consistent­ly high level as modern warm-blooded animals do, it said.

Raising their body temperatur­e above the ambient range would have allowed dinosaurs to withstand cold climates at high lati- tudes — like penguins hatching their eggs in freezing conditions.

The latest study suggests that oviraptors “had a body temperatur­e at least as high as the incubation temperatur­e” of the eggs analysed, said Amiot.

Active brooding would almost certainly not have been a universal dinosaur egg-hatching strategy, he added. “It is hard to imagine a diplodocus sitting on its clutch... without breaking its eggs or destroying the nest,” Amiot said. Some 30 metres long and weighing more than 10 tonnes, Diplodocus was one of the largest animals ever to walk the Earth.—

 ?? AFP ?? The image shows details on an oviraptoro­saur dinosaur’s egg with a preserved embryo. —
AFP The image shows details on an oviraptoro­saur dinosaur’s egg with a preserved embryo. —
 ?? AFP ?? Michael Bond. —
AFP Michael Bond. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates