Thursday, July 21, 2022

Meraxes Gigas: Giant New Carnivorous Dinosaur Discovered With Tiny Arms Like T. rex


What this tells us is that small arms are higly useful even on creatures making full use of its jaws and hind legs.  Quite clearly this would allow a carnivoir to easily scoop out entrails and move them to the mouth. 

Those happen to be high priority food items.  The jaw and rear claws can be used to tear the meat apart otherwise.

Thus those smallish arms really had value in collecting half of the body weight at least.

Meraxes Gigas: Giant New Carnivorous Dinosaur Discovered With Tiny Arms Like T. rex

TOPICS:Cell PressDinosaursPaleontologyPopularTyrannosaurus


By CELL PRESS JULY 7, 2022


Meraxes gigas — a new species of dinosaur has been discovered with disproportionally short arms just like T. rex called the Meraxes gigas.

https://scitechdaily.com/meraxes-gigas-giant-new-carnivorous-dinosaur-discovered-with-tiny-arms-like-t-rex/

Tyrannosaurs (like the infamous T. rex) is not the only group of gigantic carnivorous dinosaur with tiny arms. In fact, paleontologists have just discovered a new species of dinosaur with disproportionally short arms just like T. rex called the Meraxes gigas. The findings, published in the journal Current Biology today (July 7), argued that T. rex and M. gigas evolved to have tiny arms completely independently, and identified several potential functions for the short arms such as mating or movement support.


“The fossil of M. gigas shows never seen before, complete regions of the skeleton, like the arms and legs that helped us to understand some evolutionary trends and the anatomy of Carcharodontosaurids – the group that M. gigas belongs to,” says Juan Canale, the project leader at Ernesto Bachmann Paleontological Museum in Neuquén, Argentina.


First, to set the record straight, the authors say that T. rex did not get their short arms from M. gigas or vice versa. Not only did M. gigas become extinct almost 20 million years before T. rex became a species, but on the evolutionary tree, they are also very far apart. “There is no direct relationship between both,” says Canale. Rather, Canale believes that having tiny arms somehow provided the two dinosaurs some kind of survival advantage.



Meraxes gigas is a giant carnivorous dinosaur. Credit: Carlos Papolio


“I’m convinced that those proportionally tiny arms had some sort of function. The skeleton shows large muscle insertions and fully developed pectoral girdles, so the arm had strong muscles,” says Canale. This shows that the arms did not shrink because they were useless to the dinosaurs. The more difficult question is what exactly the functions were.

From past studies, the research group established that for dinosaurs like M. gigas and T. rex, the larger their heads were, the smaller their arms became. They were definitely not useful for hunting, as “actions related to predation were most likely performed by the head,” Canale argues.

“I’m inclined to think their arms were used in other kinds of activities,” says Canale. From the fossil record, the team was able to paint a picture of the life of this M. gigas before it died. Living in the present-day northern Patagonia region of Argentina, the dinosaur was 45 years old, about 11 meters long, and weighed more than four tons. And, it had a big family. “The group flourished and reached a peak of diversity shortly before became extinct,” says Canale. “They may have used the arms for reproductive behavior such as holding the female during mating or support themselves to stand back up after a break or a fall,” Canale adds.



Excavation site of Meraxes gigas. Credit: Juan I Canale


The team also found that the skull of M. gigas was decorated with crests, furrows, bumps, and small hornlets. “Those ornamentations appear late in the development when the individuals became adults,” Canale says. The group thinks that the features were probably used to attract potential mates. “Sexual selection is a powerful evolutionary force. But given that we cannot directly observe their behavior, it is impossible to be certain about this,” says Canale.

“The fossil has a lot of novel information, and it is in superb shape,” says Canale. He looks forward to exploring other questions that the M. gigas fossil can help him answer. “We found the perfect spot on the first day of searching, and M. gigas was found,” Canale says, “It was probably one of the most exciting points of my career.”

Reference: “New giant carnivorous dinosaur reveals convergent evolutionary trends in theropod arm reduction” by Juan I. Canale, Sebastián Apesteguía, Pablo A. Gallina, Jonathan Mitchell, Nathan D. Smith, Thomas M. Cullen, Akiko Shinya, Alejandro Haluza, Federico A. Gianechini, Peter J. Makovicky, 7 July 2022, Current Biology.


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