A new carcharodontosaurian theropod dinosaur occupies apex predator niche in the early Late Cretaceous of Uzbekistan

Author:

Tanaka Kohei1ORCID,Anvarov Otabek Ulugbek Ogli1,Zelenitsky Darla K.2,Ahmedshaev Akhmadjon Shayakubovich3,Kobayashi Yoshitsugu4

Affiliation:

1. Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Tsukuba, Tsukuba 305-8572, Ibaraki, Japan

2. Department of Geoscience, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada T2N 1N4

3. State Geological Museum of the State Committee of the Republic of Uzbekistan on Geology and Mineral Resources, Tashkent 100060, Republic of Uzbekistan

4. Hokkaido University Museum, Hokkaido University, Sapporo 060-0810, Hokkaido, Japan

Abstract

Carcharodontosauria is a group of medium to large-sized predatory theropods, distributed worldwide during the Cretaceous. These theropods were probably the apex predators of Asiamerica in the early Late Cretaceous prior to the ascent of tyrannosaurids, although few Laurasian species are known from this time due to a poor rock record. Here, we describe Ulughbegsaurus uzbekistanensis gen. et sp. nov. from the early Late Cretaceous (Turonian) of Central Asia, which represents the first record of a Late Cretaceous carcharodontosaurian from the region. This new taxon is represented by a large, isolated maxilla from the Bissekty Formation of the Kyzylkum Desert, the Republic of Uzbekistan, a formation yielding a rich and diverse assemblage of dinosaurs and other vertebrates from fragmentary remains. Comparison of the maxilla with that of other allosauroids indicates Ulughbegsaurus was 7.5–8 m in body length and greater than 1000 kg in body mass, suggesting it was the previously unrecognized apex predator of the Bissekty ecosystem while smaller known tryannosauroids and dromaeosaurids were probable mesopredators. The discovery of Ulughbegsaurus records the geologically latest stratigraphic co-occurrence of carcharodontosaurid and tyrannosauroid dinosaurs from Laurasia, and evidence indicates carcharodontosaurians remained the dominant predators relative to tyrannosauroids, at least in Asia, as late as the Turonian.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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