Los Angeles Times

Dinosaurs had shellf ish on the side

Some plant-eaters may have consumed crustacean­s on special occasions, study says.

- AMINA KHAN amina.khan@latimes.com

Some plant-eaters may have consumed crustacean­s on special occasions, researcher­s say.

Think dinosaurs didn’t mix things up at mealtime? Think again. Researcher­s studying fossilized dinosaur feces from about 75 million years ago have discovered that at least some plant-eating dinosaurs also snacked on shellfish.

The discovery of crustacean remains in the droppings, described in Scientific Reports, reveals that large herbivorou­s dinosaurs such as hadrosaurs may have had far more complex eating habits than we usually give them credit for.

“We need to refine our presumptio­ns about dinosaur diets,” said lead author Karen Chin, a paleontolo­gist at the University of Colorado-Boulder.

Scientists studying the creatures of the lost world, which was ultimately annihilate­d by an asteroid some 66 million years ago, typically look at the bones these animals left behind. But though bones reveal much about an animal’s shape, they reveal only so much about how that creature actually interacted with its environmen­t — for example, how it fit into its ecosystem’s complex food web.

That’s why a dinosaur’s poo is a paleontolo­gist’s precious stone. In the rare event that it happens to be deposited in the right environmen­tal conditions to become a fossil (at which point it’s called a coprolite), it can reveal much about what a dinosaur was actually eating.

“Direct evidence for diet in the fossil record is very rare,” Chin said. “We are usually forced to rely simply on the bones, so we study the teeth and the jaw and other aspects of functional morphology. So when we find coprolites like these … they do provide a different perspectiv­e on the diet.”

These particular coprolites were discovered in southern Utah at the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument’s Kaiparowit­s formation. They were dark — a sign that they had been filled with rotting wood — and were marked by backfilled dung-beetle tunnels.

The researcher­s could tell that the wood had been rotting before the animals ate it because it was so fragmented. This meant that a tough polymer in the cell walls called lignin had been broken down. Animals have a tough time eating fresh wood because they can’t properly digest lignin — but fungi can, which allows animals to then access the wood’s complex sugars.

Though it might seem weird that a plant-eater would consume rotting tree bits, it’s not totally out of the question, Chin said. Cattle in Chile are known to eat rotting logs on occasion, probably for the same reason. Similar wood-filled dinosaur dung had been found in Montana, too, about 1,000 miles from the Utah site.

The really strange component of the dung was this: fragments of what appeared to be crustacean shell in 10 of the 15 specimens studied. The researcher­s are not sure exactly what species these crustacean­s might be, but the shell comes in tubular shapes reminiscen­t of appendages and flat, thin-layered structures that would have made up crustacean­s’ cuticle, their hard outer layer.

One specimen full of crustacean bits could have been a fluke, but Chin and her colleagues found the shell-filled dung over three different levels of rock. That implies that this eating behavior persisted over time — perhaps very long periods of time.

The scientists say the plant-eating dinosaurs were probably hadrosaurs, large duck-billed dinosaurs that ate plants and thrived in the area. And with rows of teeth housed in their mouths, they would have been one of the few of their plant-eating peers that could chomp through wood and cuticle, too.

Why would these animals eat crustacean­s? Chin suspects the herbivores couldn’t rely on rotting wood year-round, because there wasn’t enough of it to go around. The crustacean­s may have been eaten along with the rotting wood during breeding season, when the dinosaurs needed extra calcium and protein to lay their eggs, she said.

This idea might have a parallel in the behavior of some birds, which are dinosaurs’ only living descendant­s. Chin pointed out that some seed-eating birds look for insects when it comes time to lay eggs, probably seeking out the extra proteins and minerals.

If that’s the case for these dinosaurs, then their eating habits may have been far more complex than previously thought, Chin said.

The findings came as something of a surprise, said Jordan Mallon, a paleontolo­gist at the Canadian Museum of Nature in Ottawa who was not involved in the study.

“Duck-billed dinosaurs are a group that we’ve known about for a long time, well over 100 years, and we thought we had them figured out and we thought we had them pinned as these strict herbivores,” Mallon said. “So to find that in fact their feces occasional­ly contain these crustacean cuticles kind of caught us off-guard.”

Of course, it’s nearly impossible to discern the animals’ intentions. But scientists can’t help but wonder: Were the crustacean­s eaten by accident or by choice?

Chin points out that the shelled animals were probably at least 5 centimeter­s, big enough that a hadrosaur would have noticed and could have spit one out if it wanted, the way that ducks spit out bits of food they’ve decided aren’t worth eating.

Mallon said he didn’t think the dinosaurs were intentiona­lly eating the crustacean­s; in all likelihood, they were an unintentio­nal addition to the meal.

Plenty of ocean animals today end up with plastic or other man-made debris in their guts, Mallon pointed out — trash that offered no nutritiona­l value and should have been avoided.

“Yes, animals can be selective, but you don’t have to look very long to find counter-examples in the world today,” he said.

And the fact that both shell and wood were found in the same droppings does not necessaril­y mean they were part of the same entree, Mallon said. They could have been eaten at separate times, but because both are tough materials that take time to digest, they might have ended up making their exit together.

Regardless, he added, the findings highlight how important it is to continue digging into dino droppings.

“I think what she’s been showing is that these fossilized blobs of poo are worth looking at a little further,” Mallon said of Chin and her work. “It’s showing that there’s some interestin­g things to be found in there, that we bear to learn a lot from looking at them.”

 ?? Karen Chin University of Colorado-Boulder ?? THIS DARK CRUSTACEAN shell fragment was found in fossilized dinosaur feces in southern Utah. Such a deposit is called a coprolite, and it can reveal much about what a dinosaur was actually eating.
Karen Chin University of Colorado-Boulder THIS DARK CRUSTACEAN shell fragment was found in fossilized dinosaur feces in southern Utah. Such a deposit is called a coprolite, and it can reveal much about what a dinosaur was actually eating.

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