4.8 Article

Rapid growth preceded gigantism in sauropodomorph evolution

期刊

CURRENT BIOLOGY
卷 32, 期 20, 页码 4501-+

出版社

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2022.08.031

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资金

  1. GENUS: DSI-NRF Centre of Excellence in Palaeosciences
  2. Palaeontological Scientific Trust (PAST)
  3. National Research Foundation [GUN 136513, 118794]

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Sauropod dinosaurs, the largest land animals, evolved rapid and uninterrupted growth from smaller non-sauropodan sauropodomorphs. The ability for rapid bone tissue formation was a prerequisite for giant body sizes, rather than specifically evolving for that purpose.
Sauropod dinosaurs include the largest land animals to have walked the earth, mostly weighing 10-70 tons (e.g., Sander et al.1 and Carballido et al.2). Osteohistology suggests that derived physiological traits evolved near the origin of sauropod gigantism, including both rapid and uninterrupted growth from juvenile to adult with little developmental plasticity.1,3,4 This differs from the slower, seasonally interrupted growth of their direct ancestors, as evident in most non-sauropodan sauropodomorphs, which also show developmental plasticity in some groups. Accelerated but seasonally interrupted growth is present in Lessemsauridae, the sister clade to Sauropoda, which also attained giant adult body sizes (>10 tons).5 These observations suggest a correlation between giant size and accelerated growth. However, testing this evolutionary connec-tion has been limited by the incomplete understanding of the growth patterns in some of the closest non-giant relatives of sauropods. We present the osteohistology of two such taxa, Aardonyx celestae and Sefapano-saurus zatronensis. Both exhibit highly vascularized woven-parallel complexes, with fibrolamellar complexes during early to mid-ontogeny, containing regular growth marks. These observations provide strong evidence for rapid but seasonally interrupted growth with limited developmental plasticity (indicated by the regular spacing of growth marks). Combined with our review of early branching sauropodomorph osteohistology, these results show that highly accelerated growth rates originated among smaller, non-sauropodan sauro-podomorphs weighing 1 to 2 tons but preceded the origins of giant size (>10 tons). Therefore, the capacity for rapid bone tissue formation, a derived aspect of rapid growth seen in sauropods, did not evolve specif-ically to enable giant body sizes but may have been a prerequisite for them.

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