Dental microwear texture analysis reveals a likely dietary shift within Late Cretaceous ornithopod dinosaurs

Author:

Kubo Tai12ORCID,Kubo Mugino O.2ORCID,Sakamoto Manabu3,Winkler Daniela E.24,Shibata Masateru5,Zheng Wenjie6ORCID,Jin Xingsheng6,You Hai‐Lu789

Affiliation:

1. The Macroevolution Unit Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate University Okinawa Japan

2. Department of Natural Environmental Studies, Graduate School of Frontier Sciences The University of Tokyo Chiba Japan

3. School of Life and Environmental Sciences University of Lincoln Lincoln UK

4. Zoological Institute, Kiel University Kiel Germany

5. Dinosaur Research Institute Fukui Prefectural University Fukui Japan

6. Zhejiang Museum of Natural History Hangzhou Zhejiang China

7. Key Laboratory of Vertebrate Evolution and Human Origins, Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

8. CAS Center for Excellence in Life and Paleoenvironment Beijing China

9. College of Earth and Planetary Sciences University of Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

Abstract

AbstractDinosaurs were the dominant megaherbivores during the Cretaceous when angiosperms, the flowering plants, emerged and diversified. How herbivorous dinosaurs responded to the increasing diversity of angiosperms is largely unknown due to the lack of methods that can reconstruct diet directly from body fossils. We applied dental microwear texture analysis (DMTA), an approach that quantifies microtopography of diet‐induced wear marks on tooth surfaces, to ornithopods, the dinosaur clade that includes taxa with the most sophisticated masticatory system. We found that Late Cretaceous ornithopods have significantly rougher dental microwear texture (DMT) compared to pre‐Late Cretaceous ornithopods, and DMT variation increased in hadrosaurids, a derived Late Cretaceous ornithopod clade. These changes indicate a likely temporal dietary shift towards more abrasive foodstuffs within ornithopods, probably due to the increased ingestion of phytoliths (amorphous silica bodies in plants). Phytoliths are a main source of rough DMT in modern herbivores, along with exogenous dust and grit, and were generally more concentrated in Late Cretaceous angiosperms than in other major plant groups. Our results show that DMTA of the occlusal enamel surface can be used to reconstruct the diets of herbivorous dinosaurs, with a resolution superior to conventional methods.

Funder

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Paleontology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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