Lesson 5 Birth Growth and Reproduction V5
Lesson 5 Birth Growth and Reproduction V5
Lesson 5 Birth Growth and Reproduction V5
Reproduction
Written by W. Scott Persons, Victoria Arbour, Matthew Vavrek, Philip Currie, and
Eva Koppelhus
Learning objective for lesson 5:
Students will learn a generalized
life history of a dinosaur, from birth
through adulthood, including
reproduction, and will be able to
describe major techniques used to
evaluate growth stages and growth
rates in dinosaurs
Learning objective 5.1: Describe the
characteristics of a dinosaur egg.
A little over 312 million years ago (long before
the evolution of dinosaurs or mammals), a
major milestone in tetrapod evolution was
reached: the amniotic egg. Prior to this
adaptation, all tetropods laid eggs that were
similar to those of modern frogs and
salamanders and could not retain water. Such
eggs would dry out and die if not laid in a wet,
humid place. Amniotic eggs are different. They
have encapsulating membranes that are
watertight. Animals that lay amniotic eggs are
called amniotes. Being able to hold in their own
water, amniotic eggs can be laid in dry habitats.
This allowed amniotes to colonize new
terrestrial environments. The membranes of
amniotic eggs also became adapted to form
tough leathery or hard shells. Shells improved
amniotic eggs ability to hold in water and also
made the eggs more durable and less
vulnerable to small predators. Mammals, birds,
dinosaurs, and reptiles are all amniotes.
Although most extant mammals do not lay eggs,
mammalian embryos still have membranes that
cover them while in the uterus.
Although amniotic eggs are watertight, they are
not airtight. If they were, the eggs would
suffocate. As the living cells inside an egg grow
and develop, they consume oxygen and
produce carbon dioxide waste (just as all animal
cells do). This carbon dioxide waste needs to go
somewhere, and fresh oxygen needs to be
constantly supplied. Even hard eggshells are
covered with tiny holes that permit gasses to be
exchanged between the inside of the egg and
the outside world. This need to breath places a
limit on how big eggs can be.
Recall the cube-square law -- as any shape
increases in size, its surface area increases more
slowly than its volume. Although truly
enormous dinosaur eggs are often depicted in
cartoons and poorly-researched science fiction,
the largest known dinosaur egg is only half a
meter long and most are much smaller. Eggs
that are much larger than this are not possible,
because the amount of oxygen that a dinosaur
developing inside an egg requires is a function
of its volume, while the rate at which oxygen
can be exchanged is a function of the eggshells
surface area. Giant eggs would have a low ratio
of surface area to volume and would die.
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Learning objective 5.2: Define terms
related to the gross anatomy and histology
of bones.
Hatching from relatively small eggs meant that
baby dinosaurs had a lot of growing up to do.
Bone histology has helped paleontologists to
better understand dinosaur growth rates. Recall
that bone cells are called osteons. As animals
grow their bones, they add osteons to their
bones outer walls. But the rate at which
osteons are added is not always the same and
varies with changes in growth rates. During
seasonal periods, when resources needed for
growth are scares, such as during winter or the
dry season, growth may slow down. This creates
rings inside the bones, analogous to those of a
tree trunk. These rings are called lines of
arrested growth, or LAGs for short. By studying
LAGs in young and old dinosaurs, we can
determine how long it took a dinosaur to grow
to a particular size and at what speed a
dinosaur grew. It turns out that dinosaurs grew
fast. It is estimated that a Tyrannosaurs rex
grew to its adult size in only 20 years. Even large
sauropods only took 30 years to fully mature,
and they are estimated to have gained an
average of one to two pounds every day!
The bones of younger dinosaurs are
characterized by having high vascularity (many
blood vessels) and a texture we call lamellar
bone. LAGs formed later, as dinosaurs grew.
More mature dinosaur bone then underwent a
process called remodeling, where the old bone
Cross-sections through the ulnae of different
individuals of the iguanodontian ornithopod
Tenontosaurus. A and B are cross sections through
a juvenile's ulna, and have lots of holes
representing blood vessels. C-H are from subadults.
You can see the dark circular LAGs in C, and an
arrow points to a LAG in D. Figure 3 in Werning S
(2012). The ontogenetic osteohistology of
Tenontosaurus tilletti. PLOS ONE 7:e33539.
cells were replaced by newer bone cells. This
kind of bone is called Haversian, or secondary
bone, and a picture of Haversian bone texture is
in the study guide for lesson 3. Finally, as
growth slows and then finally stops, a closely
spaced series of LAGs is formed, which is called
the external fundamental system (EFS). The
presence of an EFS indicates that the dinosaur is
skeletally mature and has stopped growing.
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Cross sections through the ulna of two adult
Tenontosaurus, showing remodeled bone. Many
LAGs are visible in A. In B, the LAGs get closer and
closer together, towards the top, indicating that
growth is slowly in this dinosaur and an EFS is
forming Figure 4 in Werning S (2012). The
ontogenetic osteohistology of Tenontosaurus
tilletti. PLOS ONE 7:e33539.
Learning objective 5.3: Evaluate the
evidence for identifying individual
dinosaurs as juveniles or adults.
Some newborn or newly hatched animals look
like tiny versions of their parents, and others
look different in a few particular ways. For
instance, new born human babies have heads
that are large relative to the overall size of their
bodies and eyes that are large relative to the
overall size of their heads. As humans grow up,
the relative proportions of our bodies, heads,
and eyes gradually approach those of their
parents. Changes in the form of an organism
that occur as it matures are called ontogenetic
changes.
Big heads and big eyes are common traits of
young animals. Baby dinosaurs also had
relatively large heads and eyes. Some dinosaur
ontogenetic changes were more dramatic. For
instance, the crests of many hadrosaurs were
not present in very young individuals, but grew
gradually as the dinosaurs reached maturity.
Some ontogenetic changes involve the growth
of entirely new structures. It seems that many
baby ankylosaurs hatched with little or no
armor and with no tail cubs. Ankylosaur body
armor and tail clubs did not grow until later in
life.
Changes in the relative proportions of an animal
as it grows, that are not simply changes
resulting from a general increase in size, are
called non-isometric ontogenetic changes. The
changes in the relative lengths of the horns and
frills of ceratopsians are examples of non-
isometric changes. Take a look at the skull of
"Baby" the Chasmosaurus, and compare it to
the skull of a fully-grown Chasmosaurus. The
frill on the adult Chasmosaurus is
proportionately much longer compared to the
juvenile. The frill in Chasmosaurus grows at a
faster rate than the rest of the skull, resulting in
a longer frill in the adult. If the frill grew at the
same rate as the rest of the skull, then the
proportions would be the same in juveniles and
adults. "Baby" also lacks a nasal horn, which is
present in the adult, which shows that the nasal
horn only appears later during growth.
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Above: The skull of "Baby" the Chasmosaurus
alongside the jaw of an adult ceratopsian. This little
Chasmosaurus still had a lot of growing to do!
Photo by J. Ulan.
Left: The skull of an adult Chasmosaurus. Note how
much longer the frill is relative to overall skull size.
Illustration by S. Hartman.
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Another example can be seen in the legs of
dinosaurs like Tyrannosaurus, where the tibia
was much longer than the femur in juveniles,
while in adults the tibia and femur were close to
the same length. Isometric ontogenetic changes
are changes in absolute size but not
proportions. For instance, unlike in
Tyrannosaurus, the length of ceratopsian hind
legs changed proportionally as the animal grew.
That is, the length of the tibia relative to the
length of the femur of a baby ceratopsian was
nearly the same as the length of the tibia
relative to the length of the femur of a full-
grown adult.
Learning objective 5.4: Evaluate the
evidence for determining whether or not a
dinosaur was male or female.
Males and females of the same species are
different this is called sexual dimorphism.
Sexually dimorphic features of the skeleton are
usually subtle but can be extreme. Consider the
massive antlers of a bull moose, which are
entirely absent on females. As with the antlers
of moose, it is common for sexually dimorphic
features to be ontogenetic changes (after all, an
animal usually does not reproduce immediately
after it is born or hatches). Sexual dimorphism
is difficult to identify in dinosaurs. For example,
some palaeontologists have suggested that the
ceratopsian Protoceratops was sexually
dimorphic, because some specimens have wider
frills than others even though their heads and
bodies are about the same size. However, it is
hard to be certain that the wider-frilled
Protoceratops are not simply older individuals,
or that they represent a different species (a
problem we will come back to in lesson 7), and
not all palaeontologists agree with the sexual
dimorphism interpretation. Another example is
the ancient bird Confuciusornis; some
specimens possessed extra-long tail feathers.
Sometimes, adult dinosaur bones are associated
with nests and eggs. If a dinosaur skeleton was
found with eggs preserved inside its body
cavity, this would probably be pretty good
evidence that the dinosaur was a female.
However, we would have to rule out that the
eggs are there because of other reasons
perhaps the dinosaur had eaten them, or they
had washed in after death and the association is
just a coincidence.
In some very rare and spectacular cases,
dinosaurs have been fossilized while sitting on,
('brooding' or incubating) a nest of eggs. We
often think that female birds do all of the
brooding, but in fact many male birds spend a
lot of time looking after eggs, and so a dinosaur
sitting on a nest of eggs could be a male or a
female.
A recent new approach seems to have solved
the problem of identifying a dinosaur's sex, at
least for some specimens. Laying eggs with hard
shells requires a female to donate a large
quantity of calcium. In preparation for this
donation, female birds grow medullary bone.
Medullary bone contains concentrations of
calcium that are stored prior to eggshell
development. Studies of bone histology work
can identify medullary bone, and, because only
female birds produce eggs, the presence of
medullary bone shows that a particular
specimen is a female. The application of this
technique is limited, because medullary bone is
only grown by females prior to egg production
and is not present at other times. Theropod
bones without medullary bone therefore could
be from a male, or from a female that was not
getting ready to lay eggs.
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Learning objective 5.5: Evaluate the
evidence for or against parental care in
different groups of dinosaurs.
Were dinosaurs devoted parents that spent
large amounts of time and energy caring for
their young, or did they simply lay their eggs
and leave their offspring to fend for
themselves? Understanding dinosaur parental
care is hard, because fossil evidence usually
provides few clues about an animals family
values. As the closest living relatives of
dinosaurs, modern birds and crocodilians may
offer some insights. Many birds, not only care
for their eggs but also feed and protect their
young after they hatch. Crocodilians also tend
to be good parents. Female crocodiles guard
their nests and, although they do not provide
their hatchlings with food, also protect their
young for an extended period of time after they
hatch.
Skeletons have been found of oviraptorosaurs
(a kind of herbivorous theropod) positioned
over top of their egg-filled nests. It appears that
these dinosaurs were fossilized in the processes
of incubating their eggs and it seems likely that
they were also guarding their nests. Often, the
skeletons of young dinosaurs are found
alongside the skeletons of adult dinosaurs, and
this suggests that these dinosaurs lived
together as a family group. So, many dinosaurs
do appear to have devoted considerable time
and effort to parental care.
In this scene, representing the fossil finds at Devil's Coulee in southern Alberta, Hypacrosaurus tend their
hatchlings in shallow nests and protect them from marauding Troodon. Hadrosaurs hatched with flat heads and
did not develop crests until they became much larger. By Jan Sovak
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This specimen of the oviraptorosaur Nemegtomaia was found sitting on top of its nest of eggs! From Fanti F,
Currie PJ, Badamgarav D. 2012. New specimens of Nemegtomaia from the Baruungoyot and Nemegt Formations
(Late Cretaceous) of Mongolia. PLOS ONE 7:e31330.
However, other lines of evidence indicate that
some dinosaurs had adaptations that allowed
them to avoid parental care completely. Return
to our thinking about the cube-square law and
the limitation that it imposes on the potential
size of dinosaur eggs. Now, recall that
sauropods include the largest of all dinosaurs.
Some giant sauropods weighed more than ten
adult elephants but laid eggs no bigger than a
basketball. Although mother sauropods could
not lay big eggs, they were able to lay a great
many eggs. Fossil nests of sauropods from
Argentina show that herds of sauropods also
laid their eggs all at the same time and at the
same place. These mass sauropod nesting
grounds have the individual nests too close
together for a mother sauropod to have
attended to her eggs without stepping on the
nest of a neighbor. It seems likely that
sauropods were using a strategy called predator
satiation. To produce a new generation of
sauropods, only a tiny fraction of the eggs that
were laid needed to hatch and grow into adults.
Rather than investing time into guarding and
rearing their young. Sauropods simply produced
so many offspring at one time that predators
would not have been able to eat them all
before they matured. This same strategy is used
by many modern sea turtles.
Supplementary Materials.
Males and females, eggs, and nests:
Laelaps: Secret of the dinosaur sexes locked in
bone. [Blog post]
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Schweitzer MH, Wittmeyer JL, Horner JR.
2005. Gender-specific reproductive tissue in
ratites and Tyrannosaurus rex. Science
308:1456-1460. [PDF of peer-reviewed paper]
Dinosaur Tracking: Baby dinosaur mystery. [Blog
post]
National Geographic Daily News: Oldest
dinosaur nests found in South Africa. [Image
slideshow with captions]
Ontogeny:
Dinosaur Tracking: How domed dinosaurs grew
up. [Blog post]
Dinosaur Tracking: Tiny Tarbosaurus shows how
tyrants grew up. [Blog post]
Dinosaur Tracking: The Torosaurus identity crisis
continues. [Blog post]
Laelaps - Getting to know Joe, an adorable little
dinosaur [Blog post]
This website about Joe is also a really good
resource. The section "Joe's Life" is the only
required reading but you may find the other
sections helpful as well.
Reproduction and parental care:
Tetrapod Zoology: Dinosaurs and their
'exaggerated structures': species recognition
aids, or sexual display devices? [Blog post]
Tetrapod Zoology: Teenage pregnancy in
Mesozoic dinosaurs. [Blog post]
ARKive: Ostrich parental care [Video]
ARKive: Nile crocodile parental care [Video]