4.4 Article

Body Size as a Driver of Scavenging in Theropod Dinosaurs

Journal

AMERICAN NATURALIST
Volume 187, Issue 6, Pages 706-716

Publisher

UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
DOI: 10.1086/686094

Keywords

dinosaurs; scavenging; scaling; body mass; theropods; agent-based models

Funding

  1. Earth and Natural Sciences Doctoral Studies Programme
  2. Higher Education Authority through the Programme for Research at Third Level Institutions, Cycle 5 (PRTLI-5)
  3. European Regional Development Fund
  4. Trinity College Dublin
  5. Irish Research Council

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Theropod dinosaurs dominated Earth's terrestrial ecosystem as a diverse group of predators for more than 160 million years, yet little is known about their foraging ecology. Maintaining a balanced energy budget presented a major challenge for therapods, which ranged from the chicken-sized Microraptor up to the whale-sized Giganotosaurus, in the face of intense competition and the demands of ontogenetic growth. Facultative scavenging, a behavior present in almost all modern predators, may have been important in supplementing energetically expensive lifestyles. By using agent-based models based on the allometric relationship between size and foraging behaviors, we show that theropods between 27 and 1,044 kg would have gained a significant energetic advantage over individuals at both the small and large extremes of theropod body mass through their scavenging efficiency. These results were robust to rate of competition, primary productivity, and detection distance. Our models demonstrate the potential importance of facultative scavenging in theropods and the role of body size in defining its prevalence in Mesozoic terrestrial systems.

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