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.2011 Apr 6;6(4):e18304.
doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0018304.

Inferences of diplodocoid (Sauropoda: Dinosauria) feeding behavior from snout shape and microwear analyses

Affiliations

Inferences of diplodocoid (Sauropoda: Dinosauria) feeding behavior from snout shape and microwear analyses

John A Whitlock. PLoS One..

Abstract

Background: As gigantic herbivores, sauropod dinosaurs were among the most important members of Mesozoic communities. Understanding their ecology is fundamental to developing a complete picture of Jurassic and Cretaceous food webs. One group of sauropods in particular, Diplodocoidea, has long been a source of debate with regard to what and how they ate. Because of their long lineage duration (Late Jurassic-Late Cretaceous) and cosmopolitan distribution, diplodocoids formed important parts of multiple ecosystems. Additionally, fortuitous preservation of a large proportion of cranial elements makes them an ideal clade in which to examine feeding behavior.

Methodology/principal findings: Hypotheses of various browsing behaviors (selective and nonselective browsing at ground-height, mid-height, or in the upper canopy) were examined using snout shape (square vs. round) and dental microwear. The square snouts, large proportion of pits, and fine subparallel scratches in Apatosaurus, Diplodocus, Nigersaurus, and Rebbachisaurus suggest ground-height nonselective browsing; the narrow snouts of Dicraeosaurus, Suuwassea, and Tornieria and the coarse scratches and gouges on the teeth of Dicraeosaurus suggest mid-height selective browsing in those taxa. Comparison with outgroups (Camarasaurus and Brachiosaurus) reinforces the inferences of ground- and mid-height browsing and the existence of both non-selective and selective browsing behaviors in diplodocoids.

Conclusions/significance: These results reaffirm previous work suggesting the presence of diverse feeding strategies in sauropods and provide solid evidence for two different feeding behaviors in Diplodocoidea. These feeding behaviors can subsequently be tied to paleoecology, such that non-selective, ground-height behaviors are restricted to open, savanna-type environments. Selective browsing behaviors are known from multiple sauropod clades and were practiced in multiple environments.

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Conflict of interest statement

Competing Interests:The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1. Snout shapes of sauropodomorph dinosaurs and ungulate mammals.
Above: A)Plateosaurus, B)Camarasaurus, and C)Diplodocus snouts. Below: Outlines of snouts from a mammalian browser D), an intermediate feeder E), and a grazer F). Sauropod snouts modified from ; mammal snout outlines modified from .
Figure 2
Figure 2. Examples of microwear features (exemplars indicated by arrows).
A) Scratches, features at least 4× longer than wide. B) Gouges, large features with irregular margins. C) Pits, subcircular features, typically small. D) A tooth ofNigersaurus, illustrating the paired wear facets, labial (ewf) and lingual (lwf), seen on rebbachisaurid teeth. The labial facet is seen in most diplodocoid dentitions. Scale in A = 0.5 mm; B, C to scale with A. Scale in D = 1 cm. D is modified from .
Figure 3
Figure 3. Reconstructions of diplodocoid skulls used in this analysis.
Reconstructions ofNigersaurus andDiplodocus modified from and , respectively. All other reconstructions based on material listed in Table S1. Skulls scaled to equivalent anteroposterior lengths.
Figure 4
Figure 4. Metrics used to determine snout shape in this study.
Snout depicted based onDiplodocus in Figure 3, anterior towards top of page. From left to right: the upper arcade index (uAI) measures snout breadth by taking the ratio of arcade width to arcade depth (higher numbers indicate squarer snouts); the premaxilla-maxilla index (PMI) is determined by taking the ratio of an area covered by the snout within a predetermined triangle to the area of that triangle (higher numbers indicate squarer snouts); the premaxillary divergence angle (PMDA) determines squareness by measuring the divergence of the anterior margin of the premaxilla from perfectly square (higher numbers indicate greater divergence from square and therefore roundness). The angle of the hypotenuse of the triangle used to calculate PMI (26°; 64° internal angle) is based on the angle used in the PMI's parent metric, the PSI .
Figure 5
Figure 5. Microwear features recovered from sauropod dinosaurs.
A,Diplodocus. B, E,Dicraeosaurus. C,Nigersaurus. D,Apatosaurus. F. c.f.Rebbachisaurus. A, C, D, and F dominated by small pits and fine scratches, interpreted as indications of ground-height, non-selective browsing; B and E are dominated by large gouges and coarse scratches, interpreted as indications of mid-height, selective browsing. A–F to scale; scale bar in A, E = 0.5 mm.
Figure 6
Figure 6. Plot of PMI scores for hadrosaurid (open symbols) and sauropod (closed symbols) dinosaurs.
The vertical axis separates taxa into sauropods (top), hadrosaurines (middle) and lambeosaurines (bottom). Squares represent taxa considered to have been non-selective browsers, circles represent taxa considered to have been selective browsers. Blue tones indicate the range of square snouts and yellow tones indicate the range of round snouts; green tone indicates overlap; dark blue/dark yellow represent the limits of hadrosaurian snout shape diversity. Overlap in snout shape occurs between behavioral guilds in hadrosaurs, but not in sauropods, although sample size is limited for sauropods. Sauropod snout shapes are also more disparate than snout shapes in hadrosaurids. Inferences of hadrosaur diet based on . Abbreviations:An,Anatotitan;Ap,Apatosaurus;Br,Brachiosaurus;Ca Camarasaurus;Co,Corythosaurus;Dic,Dicraeosaurus;Dip,Diplodocus;Ed,Edmontosaurus,Hy,Hypacrosaurus;La,Lambeosaurus;Ni,Nigersaurus;Pr,Prosaurolophus;Sa,Saurolophus;Su,Suuwassea;To,Tornieria.
Figure 7
Figure 7. Phylogeny of diplodocoid sauropods (modified from [103]), with ecosystem, inferred browse height, and inferred browse behavior plotted above terminals.
Data suggest that ground-height, non-selective browsing evolved in open, savanna-like environments, whereas selective, mid-height browsing was most common in diplodocoids living in closed environments dominated by mid- and upper-canopy browse. Blue tones indicate data suggestive of ground-height, non-selective browsing; yellow tones indicate data suggestive of mid-height, selective browsing. Inferences for which insufficient data exists are represented in 50% grey tones. Abbreviations: S, savanna type ecosystem; F, forested ecosystem; G, ground-height browser; M, mid-height browser; N, nonselective browser; Sl, selective browser.
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