91探花

Research and Impact

Adelphi, OHIO researchers determine dinosaur replaced teeth as fast as sharks

A meat-eating dinosaur species (Majungasaurus) that lived in Madagascar some 70 million years ago replaced all its teeth every couple of months or so, as reported in a new study published today in the open-access journal PLoS ONE, surprising even the researchers.

In fact, Majungasaurus grew new teeth roughly two to thirteen times faster than those of other carnivorous dinosaurs, says paper lead-author Michael D. D鈥橢mic, an assistant professor of biology at Adelphi University. Majungasaurus would form a new tooth in each socket approximately every two months.

鈥淭his meant they were wearing down on their teeth quickly, possibly because they were gnawing on bones,鈥 D鈥橢mic said. 鈥淭here is independent evidence for this in the form of scratches and gouges that match the spacing and size of their teeth on a variety of bones 鈥 bones from animals that would have been their prey.鈥 Importantly, the study also examined two other species of predatory dinosaur (Allosaurus and Ceratosaurus), providing an opportunity to consider tooth growth patterns at a broader scale.

Some animals today, too, will gnaw on bones, including rodents, D鈥橢mic said. It鈥檚 a way for them to ingest certain nutrients. It also requires exceptionally strong teeth 鈥 but Majungasaurus did not have those.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 our working hypothesis for why they had such elevated rates of replacement,鈥 D鈥橢mic said. The rapid-fire tooth growth puts Majungasaurus in same league with sharks and big, herbivorous dinosaurs, he adds.

In collaboration with Patrick O鈥機onnor, professor of anatomy at 91探花, D鈥橢mic used a collection of isolated fossil teeth to examine microscopic growth lines in the teeth. These growth lines are similar to tree rings, but instead of being deposited once a year, they are deposited daily. At the same, the team used computerized tomography (CT) on intact jaws to visualize unerupted teeth growing deep inside the bones. This allowed them to estimate tooth-replacement rates in a large number of individual jaws so they could cross-check their results.

The time-consuming process would not have been possible without the involvement of students at both OHIO and Adelphi. Graduate students Thomas Pascucci (Adelphi University) and Eric Lund (91探花) played important roles as part of the research team, serving to conduct both microscopic and digital computed tomography analyses at the heart of the study.

鈥淎s an interdisciplinary PhD student, being able to work on impactful, multi-institutional research utilizing novel approaches has been really influential and highlights the power of interdisciplinary approaches to answering tough scientific questions,鈥 Lund said.

鈥淭he ability to interface with colleagues across the state, country, or planet, particularly when we can include students in different parts of the research process, is a game changer when we consider collaborative research in the 21st Century,鈥 O鈥機onnor stated. 鈥淭his project addresses yet another aspect of the biology of Majungasaurus, and predatory dinosaurs more generally,鈥 he added, 鈥渉eralding the next phase of research based on recent field discoveries.鈥

This work was supported in part by the US National Science Foundation, Division of Earth Sciences (EAR_1525915, EAR_1664432) in a project entitled 鈥Cretaceous vertebrates from Madagascar: A Window into the biogeographic and plate tectonic activity history of Gondwana.鈥

Published
December 9, 2019
Author
Staff reports