4.7 Article

The origin and early radiation of dinosaurs

Journal

EARTH-SCIENCE REVIEWS
Volume 101, Issue 1-2, Pages 68-100

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.earscirev.2010.04.001

Keywords

dinosaurs; diversification; evolution; Jurassic; paleontology; Triassic

Funding

  1. Marshall Scholarship in the UK (University of Bristol)
  2. NSF Graduate Research Fellowship (Columbia University) [ATOL 0228693]
  3. Paleontological Society
  4. Jurassic Foundation
  5. SYNTHESYS
  6. Bob Savage Memorial Fund (University of Bristol)
  7. University of California Museum of Paleontology Samuel & Doris Welles Research
  8. University of California - Berkeley Department of Integrative Biology
  9. Palaeontological Association Sylvester-Bradley Award
  10. American Museum of Natural History Theodore Roosevelt Memorial Fund
  11. Society of Vertebrate Paleontology Bryan Patterson Memorial Grant
  12. University of Utah
  13. Alexander von Humboldt Postdoctoral Fellowship
  14. NERC [NE/C518973/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  15. Natural Environment Research Council [NE/C518973/1] Funding Source: researchfish

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Dinosaurs were remarkably successful during the Mesozoic and one subgroup, birds, remain an important component of modern ecosystems. Although the extinction of non-avian dinosaurs at the end of the Cretaceous has been the subject of intense debate, comparatively little attention has been given to the origin and early evolution of dinosaurs during the Late Triassic and Early Jurassic, one of the most important evolutionary radiations in earth history. Our understanding of this keystone event has dramatically changed over the past 25 years, thanks to an influx of new fossil discoveries, reinterpretations of long-ignored specimens, and quantitative macroevolutionary analyses that synthesize anatomical and geological data. Here we provide an overview of the first 50 million years of dinosaur history, with a focus on the large-scale patterns that characterize the ascent of dinosaurs from a small, almost marginal group of reptiles in the Late Triassic to the preeminent terrestrial vertebrates of the Jurassic and Cretaceous. We provide both a biological and geological background for early dinosaur history. Dinosaurs are deeply nested among the archosaurian reptiles, diagnosed by only a small number of characters, and are subdivided into a number of major lineages. The first unequivocal dinosaurs are known from the late Carnian of South America, but the presence of their sister group in the Middle Triassic implies that dinosaurs possibly originated much earlier. The three major dinosaur lineages, theropods, sauropodomorphs, and ornithischians, are all known from the Triassic, when continents were joined into the supercontinent Pangaea and global climates were hot and arid. Although many researchers have long suggested that dinosaurs outcompeted other reptile groups during the Triassic, we argue that the ascent of dinosaurs was more of a matter of contingency and opportunism. Dinosaurs were overshadowed in most Late Triassic ecosystems by crocodile-line archosaurs and showed no signs of outcompeting their rivals. Instead, the rise of dinosaurs was a two-stage process, as dinosaurs expanded in taxonomic diversity, morphological disparity, and absolute faunal abundance only after the extinction of most crocodile-line reptiles and other groups. (c) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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