fbpx
Wikipedia

Carcharodontosauridae

Carcharodontosauridae (carcharodontosaurids; from the Greek καρχαροδοντόσαυρος, carcharodontósauros: "shark-toothed lizards") is a group of carnivorous theropod dinosaurs. In 1931, Ernst Stromer named Carcharodontosauridae as a family, which, in modern paleontology, indicates a clade within Carnosauria. Carcharodontosaurids include some of the largest land predators ever known: Giganotosaurus, Mapusaurus, Carcharodontosaurus, and Tyrannotitan all rivaled Tyrannosaurus in size. Estimates give a maximum weight of 8–10 metric tons (8.8–11.0 short tons) for the largest carcharodontosaurids, while the smallest carcharodontosaurids were estimated to have weighed at least 500 kilograms (1,100 lb).

Carcharodontosaurids
Temporal range: 154–89 Ma Possible Campanian record
Reconstructed Carcharodontosaurus skull, Science Museum of Minnesota
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Clade: Dinosauria
Clade: Saurischia
Clade: Theropoda
Clade: Carcharodontosauria
Family: Carcharodontosauridae
Stromer, 1931
Subgroups
Synonyms
  • Acrocanthosauridae Molnar, 2003

Evolution edit

 
Restoration of the crushed skull of Concavenator

Along with the spinosaurids, carcharodontosaurids were the largest predators in the early and middle Cretaceous throughout Gondwana, with species also present in North America (Acrocanthosaurus), Europe (Concavenator) and Asia (Shaochilong).[5] Carcharodontosaurids range throughout the Cretaceous from the Barremian (127-121 million years ago) to the Turonian (93-89 million years ago). Past the Turonian, they were replaced by the smaller abelisaurids in Gondwana and by tyrannosaurids in North America and Asia.[6][7] While some teeth and a maxilla discovered in Maastrichtian deposits of Brazil.[8][9] this identification has been subsequently rejected and the material assigned to abelisaurids after better examination,[10] and there are no reliable records of carcharodontosaurs in South America beyond the end of the Turonian.[6] In December 2011, Oliver W. M. Rauhut described a new genus and species of carcharodontosaurid from the Late Jurassic (late Kimmeridgian to earliest Tithonian faunal stage, about 154-150 million years ago) of Tendaguru Formation, southeastern Tanzania. This genus, Veterupristisaurus represents the oldest known carcharodontosaurid.[11]

Classification edit

The family Carcharodontosauridae was originally named by Ernst Stromer in 1931 to include the single newly discovered species Carcharodontosaurus saharicus. A close relative of C. saharicus, Giganotosaurus, was added to the family when it was described in 1995. Additionally, many paleontologists have included Acrocanthosaurus in this family (Sereno et al. 1996, Harris 1998, Holtz 2000, Rauhut 2003, Eddy & Clarke, 2011, Rauhut 2011), though others place it in the related family Allosauridae (Currie & Carpenter, 2000; Coria & Currie, 2002). Carcharodontosaurids are characterized by the following morphological characters : Dorsoventral depth of anterior maxillary interdental plates more than twice anteroposterior width, squared, sub-rectangular anterior portion of the dentary, teeth with wrinkled enamel surfaces, presence of four premaxillary alveoli and a premaxillary body taller than long in lateral aspect, opisthocoelous cervical vertebrae with neural spines more than 1.9 times the height of the centrum, large, textured rugosities on the lacrimal and postorbital formed by roofing and forming broad orbital shelves, and a proximomedially inclined femoral head.[12][13] With the discovery of Mapusaurus in 2006, Rodolfo Coria and Phil Currie erected a subfamily of Carcharodontosauridae, the Giganotosaurinae, to contain the most advanced South American species, which they found to be more closely related to each other than to the African and European forms. Coria and Currie did not formally refer Tyrannotitan to this subfamily, pending a more detailed description of that genus, but noted that based on characteristics of the femur, it may be a gigantosaurine as well.[14]

 
Size comparison of seven carcharodontosaurids

In 1998 Paul Sereno defined Carcharodontosauridae as a clade, consisting of Carcharodontosaurus and all species closer to it than to either Allosaurus, Sinraptor, Monolophosaurus, or Cryolophosaurus. Therefore, this clade is by definition outside of the clade Allosauridae. The cladogram below follows the analysis of Brusatte et al., 2009.[5]

Cladogram after Ortega et al., 2010[12]

Cladogram after Novas et al., 2013[4]

Allosaurus  

Carcharodontosauridae

Cladogram after Canale et al., 2022[2]

 
Mounted Acrocanthosaurus skeleton (NCSM 14345) at the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences.

The placement of Acrocanthosaurus is unclear, with most[13] researchers favoring Carcharodontosauridae and others favoring Allosauridae. In 2011, a redescription of Kelmayisaurus by Stephen L. Brusatte, Roger B. J. Benson and Xing Xu found it to be valid genus of Carcharodontosauridae. A phylogenetic analysis of Tetanurae recovered K. petrolicus as a basal carcharodontosaurid in a trichotomy with Eocarcharia and a clade comprising more derived carcharodontosaurids.[1] Bahariasaurus has also been proposed as a carcharodontosaurid, but its remains are too scarce to be certain.

Carcharodontosaurids have been proposed as more closely related to abelisaurids, as opposed to the allosaurids. This is due to these two clades sharing some cranial features. However, these similarities appear to derive from parallel evolution between these two groups. A larger number of cranial and postcranial characters support their relationship with allosaurids.

Paleobiology edit

Growth edit

Studies of the Argentinian taxon Meraxes suggest that these allosauroids were slow-growing, taking as long as 30-40 years to reach maturity. The maximum age for the holotype specimen was estimated to be roughly 50 years at the time of its death, making it the oldest known non-avian theropod. Unlike Tyrannosaurus, to which its growth has been compared, this carcharodontosaurid kept growing throughout its life.[15]

In 2021 the paleontologist Andrea Cau proposed that Scipionyx, formally classified as a compsognathid, was instead an hatchling carcharodontosaurid. He compared it with Allosaurus and Acrocanthosaurus, finding it more similar to the carcharodontosaurid than the allosaurid.[16]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Stephen L. Brusatte; Roger B. J. Benson; Xing Xu (2012). (PDF). Acta Palaeontologica Polonica. 57 (1): 65–72. doi:10.4202/app.2010.0125. S2CID 53387460. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-12-18. Retrieved 2011-04-28.
  2. ^ a b c Canale, J.I.; Apesteguía, S.; Gallina, P.A.; Mitchell, J.; Smith, N.D.; Cullen, T.M.; Shinya, A.; Haluza, A.; Gianechini, F.A.; Makovicky, P.J. (2022-07-07). "New giant carnivorous dinosaur reveals convergent evolutionary trends in theropod arm reduction". Current Biology. 32 (14): 3195–3202.e5. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2022.05.057. PMID 35803271.
  3. ^ Carrano, M.T.; Benson, R.B.; Sampson, S.D. (2012). "The phylogeny of Tetanurae (Dinosauria: Theropoda)". Journal of Systematic Palaeontology. 10 (2): 211–300. doi:10.1080/14772019.2011.630927. S2CID 85354215.
  4. ^ a b Novas, Fernando E. (2013). "Evolution of the carnivorous dinosaurs during the Cretaceous: The evidence from Patagonia". Cretaceous Research. 45: 174–215. doi:10.1016/j.cretres.2013.04.001. hdl:11336/102037.
  5. ^ a b Brusatte, S.; Benson, R.; Chure, D.; Xu, X.; Sullivan, C.; Hone, D. (2009). "The first definitive carcharodontosaurid (Dinosauria: Theropoda) from Asia and the delayed ascent of tyrannosaurids" (PDF). Naturwissenschaften. 96 (9): 1051–8. Bibcode:2009NW.....96.1051B. doi:10.1007/s00114-009-0565-2. hdl:20.500.11820/33528c2e-0c9c-4160-8693-984f077ee5d0. PMID 19488730. S2CID 25532873.
  6. ^ a b Meso, J.G.; Juárez Valieri, R.D.; Porfiri, J.D.; Correa, S.A.S.; Martinelli, A.G.; Casal, G.A.; Canudo, J.I.; Poblete, F.; Dos Santos, D. (2021-09-01). "Testing the persistence of Carcharodontosauridae (Theropoda) in the Upper Cretaceous of Patagonia based on dental evidence". Cretaceous Research. 125: 104875. doi:10.1016/j.cretres.2021.104875. hdl:11336/183886. ISSN 0195-6671.
  7. ^ Novas, de Valais, Vickers-Rich, and Rich. (2005). "A large Cretaceous theropod from Patagonia, Argentina, and the evolution of carcharodontosaurids." Naturwissenschaften,
  8. ^ Rodrigo P. Fernandes de Azevedo; Felipe Medeiros Simbras; Miguel Rodrigues Furtado; Carlos Roberto A. Candeiro & Lílian Paglarelli Bergqvist (2013). "First Brazilian carcharodontosaurid and other new theropod dinosaur fossils from the Campanian–Maastrichtian Presidente Prudente Formation, São Paulo State, southeastern Brazil". Cretaceous Research. 40: 131–142. doi:10.1016/j.cretres.2012.06.004.
  9. ^ Carlos Roberto Candeiro; Philip Currie; Lílian Bergqvist (2012). "Theropod teeth from the Marília Formation (late Maastrichtian) at the Paleontological Site of Peirópolis in Minas Gerais State, Brazil". Revista Brasileira de Geociências. 42 (2): 323–330. doi:10.5327/z0375-75362012000200008.
  10. ^ Delcourt, R.; Grillo, O.N. (2017). "Carcharodontosaurids remained extinct in the Campanian-Maastrichtian: Reassessment of a fragmentary maxilla from Presidente Prudente Formation, Brazil". Cretaceous Research. 84: 515–524. doi:10.1016/j.cretres.2017.09.008.
  11. ^ Rauhut, Oliver W. M. (2011). "Theropod dinosaurs from the Late Jurassic of Tendaguru (Tanzania)". Special Papers in Palaeontology. 86: 195–239.
  12. ^ a b Ortega, F.; Escaso, F.; Sanz, J. L. (2010). (PDF). Nature. 467 (7312): 203–206. Bibcode:2010Natur.467..203O. doi:10.1038/nature09181. PMID 20829793. S2CID 4395795. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2018-10-08. Retrieved 2016-12-06.
  13. ^ a b Eddy, DR; Clarke, JA (2011). "New Information on the Cranial Anatomy of Acrocanthosaurus atokensis and Its Implications for the Phylogeny of Allosauroidea (Dinosauria: Theropoda)". PLOS ONE. 6 (3): e17932. Bibcode:2011PLoSO...617932E. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0017932. PMC 3061882. PMID 21445312.
  14. ^ Coria, R.A.; Currie, P.J. (2006). "A new carcharodontosaurid (Dinosauria, Theropoda) from the Upper Cretaceous of Argentina". Geodiversitas. 28 (1): 71–118.
  15. ^ "T. rex had huge growth spurts, but other dinos grew slow and steady: By cutting into fossils and examining growth rings, scientists learned how predatory dinosaurs got so big". ScienceDaily.
  16. ^ "Comments on the Mesozoic theropod dinosaurs from Italy". ResearchGate. Retrieved 2021-12-27.

External links edit

carcharodontosauridae, carcharodontosaurids, from, greek, καρχαροδοντόσαυρος, carcharodontósauros, shark, toothed, lizards, group, carnivorous, theropod, dinosaurs, 1931, ernst, stromer, named, family, which, modern, paleontology, indicates, clade, within, car. Carcharodontosauridae carcharodontosaurids from the Greek karxarodontosayros carcharodontosauros shark toothed lizards is a group of carnivorous theropod dinosaurs In 1931 Ernst Stromer named Carcharodontosauridae as a family which in modern paleontology indicates a clade within Carnosauria Carcharodontosaurids include some of the largest land predators ever known Giganotosaurus Mapusaurus Carcharodontosaurus and Tyrannotitan all rivaled Tyrannosaurus in size Estimates give a maximum weight of 8 10 metric tons 8 8 11 0 short tons for the largest carcharodontosaurids while the smallest carcharodontosaurids were estimated to have weighed at least 500 kilograms 1 100 lb CarcharodontosauridsTemporal range 154 89 Ma PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg N Possible Campanian recordReconstructed Carcharodontosaurus skull Science Museum of MinnesotaScientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClade DinosauriaClade SaurischiaClade TheropodaClade CarcharodontosauriaFamily CarcharodontosauridaeStromer 1931Subgroups Acrocanthosaurus Concavenator Eocarcharia Kelmayisaurus 1 Lajasvenator Lusovenator 2 Neovenator 2 Sauroniops Shaochilong Scipionyx Taurovenator Unquillosaurus 3 Veterupristisaurus Carcharodontosaurinae 4 Carcharodontosaurus Giganotosaurini Giganotosaurus Mapusaurus Meraxes TyrannotitanSynonymsAcrocanthosauridae Molnar 2003 Contents 1 Evolution 2 Classification 3 Paleobiology 3 1 Growth 4 References 5 External linksEvolution edit nbsp Restoration of the crushed skull of ConcavenatorAlong with the spinosaurids carcharodontosaurids were the largest predators in the early and middle Cretaceous throughout Gondwana with species also present in North America Acrocanthosaurus Europe Concavenator and Asia Shaochilong 5 Carcharodontosaurids range throughout the Cretaceous from the Barremian 127 121 million years ago to the Turonian 93 89 million years ago Past the Turonian they were replaced by the smaller abelisaurids in Gondwana and by tyrannosaurids in North America and Asia 6 7 While some teeth and a maxilla discovered in Maastrichtian deposits of Brazil 8 9 this identification has been subsequently rejected and the material assigned to abelisaurids after better examination 10 and there are no reliable records of carcharodontosaurs in South America beyond the end of the Turonian 6 In December 2011 Oliver W M Rauhut described a new genus and species of carcharodontosaurid from the Late Jurassic late Kimmeridgian to earliest Tithonian faunal stage about 154 150 million years ago of Tendaguru Formation southeastern Tanzania This genus Veterupristisaurus represents the oldest known carcharodontosaurid 11 Classification editThe family Carcharodontosauridae was originally named by Ernst Stromer in 1931 to include the single newly discovered species Carcharodontosaurus saharicus A close relative of C saharicus Giganotosaurus was added to the family when it was described in 1995 Additionally many paleontologists have included Acrocanthosaurus in this family Sereno et al 1996 Harris 1998 Holtz 2000 Rauhut 2003 Eddy amp Clarke 2011 Rauhut 2011 though others place it in the related family Allosauridae Currie amp Carpenter 2000 Coria amp Currie 2002 Carcharodontosaurids are characterized by the following morphological characters Dorsoventral depth of anterior maxillary interdental plates more than twice anteroposterior width squared sub rectangular anterior portion of the dentary teeth with wrinkled enamel surfaces presence of four premaxillary alveoli and a premaxillary body taller than long in lateral aspect opisthocoelous cervical vertebrae with neural spines more than 1 9 times the height of the centrum large textured rugosities on the lacrimal and postorbital formed by roofing and forming broad orbital shelves and a proximomedially inclined femoral head 12 13 With the discovery of Mapusaurus in 2006 Rodolfo Coria and Phil Currie erected a subfamily of Carcharodontosauridae the Giganotosaurinae to contain the most advanced South American species which they found to be more closely related to each other than to the African and European forms Coria and Currie did not formally refer Tyrannotitan to this subfamily pending a more detailed description of that genus but noted that based on characteristics of the femur it may be a gigantosaurine as well 14 nbsp Size comparison of seven carcharodontosauridsIn 1998 Paul Sereno defined Carcharodontosauridae as a clade consisting of Carcharodontosaurus and all species closer to it than to either Allosaurus Sinraptor Monolophosaurus or Cryolophosaurus Therefore this clade is by definition outside of the clade Allosauridae The cladogram below follows the analysis of Brusatte et al 2009 5 Carcharodontosauridae Neovenator nbsp Acrocanthosaurus nbsp Eocarcharia nbsp Shaochilong nbsp TyrannotitanCarcharodontosaurus nbsp Giganotosaurinae Giganotosaurus nbsp Mapusaurus nbsp Cladogram after Ortega et al 2010 12 Carcharodontosauridae Eocarcharia nbsp Concavenator nbsp Acrocanthosaurus nbsp Shaochilong nbsp TyrannotitanCarcharodontosaurus nbsp Giganotosaurus nbsp Mapusaurus nbsp Cladogram after Novas et al 2013 4 Allosaurus nbsp Carcharodontosauridae Neovenator nbsp Eocarcharia nbsp Concavenator nbsp Acrocanthosaurus nbsp Shaochilong nbsp Carcharodontosaurinae Carcharodontosaurus nbsp Giganotosaurini TyrannotitanMapusaurus nbsp Giganotosaurus nbsp Cladogram after Canale et al 2022 2 Carcharodontosauridae NeovenatorConcavenatorEocarchariaLajasvenatorLusovenatorAcrocanthosaurusShaochilongCarcharodontosaurinae Carcharodontosaurus spp Giganotosaurini MeraxesTyrannotitanGiganotosaurusMapusaurus nbsp Mounted Acrocanthosaurus skeleton NCSM 14345 at the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences The placement of Acrocanthosaurus is unclear with most 13 researchers favoring Carcharodontosauridae and others favoring Allosauridae In 2011 a redescription of Kelmayisaurus by Stephen L Brusatte Roger B J Benson and Xing Xu found it to be valid genus of Carcharodontosauridae A phylogenetic analysis of Tetanurae recovered K petrolicus as a basal carcharodontosaurid in a trichotomy with Eocarcharia and a clade comprising more derived carcharodontosaurids 1 Bahariasaurus has also been proposed as a carcharodontosaurid but its remains are too scarce to be certain Carcharodontosaurids have been proposed as more closely related to abelisaurids as opposed to the allosaurids This is due to these two clades sharing some cranial features However these similarities appear to derive from parallel evolution between these two groups A larger number of cranial and postcranial characters support their relationship with allosaurids Paleobiology editGrowth edit Studies of the Argentinian taxon Meraxes suggest that these allosauroids were slow growing taking as long as 30 40 years to reach maturity The maximum age for the holotype specimen was estimated to be roughly 50 years at the time of its death making it the oldest known non avian theropod Unlike Tyrannosaurus to which its growth has been compared this carcharodontosaurid kept growing throughout its life 15 In 2021 the paleontologist Andrea Cau proposed that Scipionyx formally classified as a compsognathid was instead an hatchling carcharodontosaurid He compared it with Allosaurus and Acrocanthosaurus finding it more similar to the carcharodontosaurid than the allosaurid 16 References edit a b Stephen L Brusatte Roger B J Benson Xing Xu 2012 A reassessment of Kelmayisaurus petrolicus a large theropod dinosaur from the Early Cretaceous of China PDF Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 57 1 65 72 doi 10 4202 app 2010 0125 S2CID 53387460 Archived from the original PDF on 2011 12 18 Retrieved 2011 04 28 a b c Canale J I Apesteguia S Gallina P A Mitchell J Smith N D Cullen T M Shinya A Haluza A Gianechini F A Makovicky P J 2022 07 07 New giant carnivorous dinosaur reveals convergent evolutionary trends in theropod arm reduction Current Biology 32 14 3195 3202 e5 doi 10 1016 j cub 2022 05 057 PMID 35803271 Carrano M T Benson R B Sampson S D 2012 The phylogeny of Tetanurae Dinosauria Theropoda Journal of Systematic Palaeontology 10 2 211 300 doi 10 1080 14772019 2011 630927 S2CID 85354215 a b Novas Fernando E 2013 Evolution of the carnivorous dinosaurs during the Cretaceous The evidence from Patagonia Cretaceous Research 45 174 215 doi 10 1016 j cretres 2013 04 001 hdl 11336 102037 a b Brusatte S Benson R Chure D Xu X Sullivan C Hone D 2009 The first definitive carcharodontosaurid Dinosauria Theropoda from Asia and the delayed ascent of tyrannosaurids PDF Naturwissenschaften 96 9 1051 8 Bibcode 2009NW 96 1051B doi 10 1007 s00114 009 0565 2 hdl 20 500 11820 33528c2e 0c9c 4160 8693 984f077ee5d0 PMID 19488730 S2CID 25532873 a b Meso J G Juarez Valieri R D Porfiri J D Correa S A S Martinelli A G Casal G A Canudo J I Poblete F Dos Santos D 2021 09 01 Testing the persistence of Carcharodontosauridae Theropoda in the Upper Cretaceous of Patagonia based on dental evidence Cretaceous Research 125 104875 doi 10 1016 j cretres 2021 104875 hdl 11336 183886 ISSN 0195 6671 Novas de Valais Vickers Rich and Rich 2005 A large Cretaceous theropod from Patagonia Argentina and the evolution of carcharodontosaurids Naturwissenschaften Rodrigo P Fernandes de Azevedo Felipe Medeiros Simbras Miguel Rodrigues Furtado Carlos Roberto A Candeiro amp Lilian Paglarelli Bergqvist 2013 First Brazilian carcharodontosaurid and other new theropod dinosaur fossils from the Campanian Maastrichtian Presidente Prudente Formation Sao Paulo State southeastern Brazil Cretaceous Research 40 131 142 doi 10 1016 j cretres 2012 06 004 Carlos Roberto Candeiro Philip Currie Lilian Bergqvist 2012 Theropod teeth from the Marilia Formation late Maastrichtian at the Paleontological Site of Peiropolis in Minas Gerais State Brazil Revista Brasileira de Geociencias 42 2 323 330 doi 10 5327 z0375 75362012000200008 Delcourt R Grillo O N 2017 Carcharodontosaurids remained extinct in the Campanian Maastrichtian Reassessment of a fragmentary maxilla from Presidente Prudente Formation Brazil Cretaceous Research 84 515 524 doi 10 1016 j cretres 2017 09 008 Rauhut Oliver W M 2011 Theropod dinosaurs from the Late Jurassic of Tendaguru Tanzania Special Papers in Palaeontology 86 195 239 a b Ortega F Escaso F Sanz J L 2010 A bizarre humped Carcharodontosauria Theropoda from the Lower Cretaceous of Spain PDF Nature 467 7312 203 206 Bibcode 2010Natur 467 203O doi 10 1038 nature09181 PMID 20829793 S2CID 4395795 Archived from the original PDF on 2018 10 08 Retrieved 2016 12 06 a b Eddy DR Clarke JA 2011 New Information on the Cranial Anatomy of Acrocanthosaurus atokensis and Its Implications for the Phylogeny of Allosauroidea Dinosauria Theropoda PLOS ONE 6 3 e17932 Bibcode 2011PLoSO 617932E doi 10 1371 journal pone 0017932 PMC 3061882 PMID 21445312 Coria R A Currie P J 2006 A new carcharodontosaurid Dinosauria Theropoda from the Upper Cretaceous of Argentina Geodiversitas 28 1 71 118 T rex had huge growth spurts but other dinos grew slow and steady By cutting into fossils and examining growth rings scientists learned how predatory dinosaurs got so big ScienceDaily Comments on the Mesozoic theropod dinosaurs from Italy ResearchGate Retrieved 2021 12 27 External links edit nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Carcharodontosauridae nbsp Dinosaurs portalCarcharodontosauridae Abelisauridae Archived 2021 04 28 at the Wayback Machine Carcharodontosauridae Abelisauridae 2 Archived 2021 04 30 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Carcharodontosauridae amp oldid 1198619712, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.