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Dinosaurs were not only the largest animals to roam the Earth – they also had a greater number of larger species compared to all other back-boned animals – scientists suggest in a new paper published in the journal PLOS ONE today (Thursday 20 December).
The researchers, from Queen Mary, University of London, compared the size of the femur bone of 329 different dinosaur species from fossil records. The length and weight of the femur bone is a recognised method in palaeontology for estimating a dinosaur’s body mass.
Credit: Queen Mary, University of London
Dr Eoin Gorman, also from Queen Mary’s School of Biological and Chemical Sciences added: “There is growing evidence that dinosaurs produced a large number of offspring, which were immediately vulnerable to predation due to their smaller size. It was beneficial for the herbivores to grow to large size as rapidly as possible to escape this threat, but the carnivores had sufficient resources to live optimally at smaller sizes.
“These differences are reflected in our analyses and also offer an explanation why other groups do not follow a similar pattern. Several modern-day vertebrate groups are almost entirely carnivorous, while many of the herbivores are warm-blooded, which limits their size.”
2012-12-20 11:30:47
Source: http://nanopatentsandinnovations.blogspot.com/2012/12/why-did-dinosaurs-get-so-big-new-clues.html