Abstract
One testable hypothesis of the theory that dinosaurs were endothermic is the observation that sauropod dinosaurs were too large, their heads were too small, and their food was too indigestible for them to be warm-blooded. Calculations on the daily calorie requirements of the sauropod Brachiosaurus, adjusted for digestibility and the energetic cost of “free-living,” were compared with the caloric density of Late Jurassic food plants and the feeding rates of an elephant and a giraffe. Using Brachiosaurus as a model I concluded that endothermy in large sauropods (greater than 55 metric tons) was impossible. Depending on assumptions about feeding rates and the cost of free-living, endothermy in smaller sauropods ranges from improbable to impossible.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Paleontology,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Reference66 articles.
1. Spotila J. R. 1980. Constraints of body size and environment on the temperature regulation of dinosaurs. Pp. 233–252. In:
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35 articles.
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