Monday, April 22, 2013

Piscovory by Microraptor in Jehol Biota


PISCIVORY IN THE FEATHERED DINOSAUR MICRORAPTOR

Authors:

1. Lida Xing (a,b,c)
2. W. Scott Persons IV (c)
3. Phil R. Bell (d)
4. Xing Xu (b)
5. Jianping Zhang (a)
6. Tetsuto Miyashita (b)
7. Fengping Wang (e)
8. Philip J. Currie (c)

Affiliations:

a. School of the Earth Sciences and Resources, China University of Geosciences, Beijing, China

b. Key Laboratory of Evolutionary Systematics of Vertebrates, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China

c. Department of Biological Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada

d. Pipestone Creek Dinosaur Initiative, Clairmont, Alberta, Canada

e. Qijiang District Bureau of Land and Resources, Chongqing, China

Abstract:

The largest specimen of the four-winged dromaeosaurid dinosaur Microraptor gui includes preserved gut contents. Previous reports of gut contents and considerations of functional morphology have indicated that Microraptor hunted in an arboreal environment. The new specimen demonstrates that this was not strictly the case, and offers unique insights into the ecology of nonavian dinosaurs early in the evolution of flight. The preserved gut contents are composed of teleost fish remains. Several morphological adaptations of Microraptor are identified as consistent with a partially piscivorous diet, including dentition with reduced serrations and forward projecting teeth on the anterior of the dentary. The feeding habits of Microraptor can now be understood better than that of any other carnivorous nonavian dinosaur, and Microraptor appears to have been an opportunistic and generalist feeder, able to exploit the most common prey in both the arboreal and aquatic microhabitats of the Early Cretaceous Jehol ecosystem.

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