Anomalously high variation in postnatal development is ancestral for dinosaurs but lost in birds

CT Griffin, SJ Nesbitt - … of the National Academy of Sciences, 2016 - National Acad Sciences
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2016National Acad Sciences
Compared with all other living reptiles, birds grow extremely fast and possess unusually low
levels of intraspecific variation during postnatal development. It is now clear that birds
inherited their high rates of growth from their dinosaurian ancestors, but the origin of the
avian condition of low variation during development is poorly constrained. The most well-
understood growth trajectories of later Mesozoic theropods (eg, Tyrannosaurus, Allosaurus)
show similarly low variation to birds, contrasting with higher variation in extant crocodylians …
Compared with all other living reptiles, birds grow extremely fast and possess unusually low levels of intraspecific variation during postnatal development. It is now clear that birds inherited their high rates of growth from their dinosaurian ancestors, but the origin of the avian condition of low variation during development is poorly constrained. The most well-understood growth trajectories of later Mesozoic theropods (e.g., Tyrannosaurus, Allosaurus) show similarly low variation to birds, contrasting with higher variation in extant crocodylians. Here, we show that deep within Dinosauria, among the earliest-diverging dinosaurs, anomalously high intraspecific variation is widespread but then is lost in more derived theropods. This style of development is ancestral for dinosaurs and their closest relatives, and, surprisingly, this level of variation is far higher than in living crocodylians. Among early dinosaurs, this variation is widespread across Pangaea in the Triassic and Early Jurassic, and among early-diverging theropods (ceratosaurs), this variation is maintained for 165 million years to the end of the Cretaceous. Because the Late Triassic environment across Pangaea was volatile and heterogeneous, this variation may have contributed to the rise of dinosaurian dominance through the end of the Triassic Period.
National Acad Sciences
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