Crocodile-headed dinosaur had craving for fish
www.chinaview.cn 2008-01-15 20:20:11   Print

    BEIJING, Jan. 15 (Xinhuanet) -- A 30-foot-long carnivorous dinosaur with a head that looked part crocodile and 12-inch-long hand claws that may have been used as grappling hooks to scoop fish from the water about 125 million years ago most likely preferred fish over other meat, research reveals.

    Unlike other theropods such as Tyrannosaurus rex, Baryonyx walkeri did not possess blade-like serrated teeth. Instead, its long narrow jaws had small pointed teeth, much like in alligators and crocodiles. It also had a bulbous tip at the end of its snout that held a clump of teeth, a trait seen today in slender-jawed fish-eating crocodilians such as the Indian gharial.

    In other words, Baryonyx's skull "looked part-dinosaur and part-crocodile, so we wanted to establish which it was more similar to, structurally and functionally -- a dinosaur or a crocodile," said researcher Emily Rayfield, a paleontologist at the University of Bristol in England.

    The researchers scanned the skull of Baryonyx with X-rays to generate a digital model of it. Rayfield and her colleagues then compared the digital model of Baryonyx's snout with those of an alligator, a gharial and a typical theropod.

    Computer models now reveal that while Baryonyx was eating, its skull bent and stretched in the same way as that of the gharial.

    "We've got a dinosaur whose skull has independently become very much like a crocodilian in certain aspects, and now we find they're similar in how they actually feed as well," Rayfield said.

    The skulls of both the gharial and Baryonyx seem optimized to resist bending, while the alligator's is most effective at resisting twisting. The generic theropod skull was more all-purpose, "which fits in with what we know of its feeding behavior, where its head had to move in lots of different directions to catch small moving prey," Rayfield told LiveScience.

    The scientists have found partially digested fish scales and teeth around the stomach of a fossil Baryonyx, but also discovered a bone from a juvenile Iguanodon there as well. So while Baryonyx may have fed predominantly on fish, it occasionally dined on other prey as well.

    (Agencies) 

Editor: Gareth Dodd
Related Stories
Home Culture & Edu
  Back to Top