Dec 19,2024
Mooney Goes Wild contributor Terry Flanagan shares his latest round up of nature news.
You might think that fossilised dung (also known as coprolites) might be quite useless, but scientists in an international collaboration have analysed hundreds of samples and they have provided clues about the role dinosaurs played in the ecosystem around 200 million years ago.
Researchers at Uppsala University have been able to identify undigested food remains, plants and prey in the fossilised faeces of dinosaurs. The findings have now been published in the journal Nature.
"Piecing together 'who ate whom' in the past is true detective work," says Martin Qvarnström, researcher at the Department of Organismal Biology and lead author of the study. "Being able to examine what animals ate and how they interacted with their environment helps us understand what enabled dinosaurs to be so successful."
The scientists have examined hundreds of samples using advanced synchrotron imaging to visualise the hidden, internal parts of the fossilised faeces, known as coprolites, in detail. By identifying undigested food remains, plants and prey, they have recreated the structure of the ecosystems at the time when dinosaurs began their success story.
"The research material was collected over a period of 25 years. It took us many years to piece everything together into a coherent picture," says Grzegorz Niedźwiedzki, researcher at the Department of Organismal Biology and the study's senior author.
"Our research is innovative because we have chosen to understand the biology of early dinosaurs based on their dietary preferences. There were many surprising discoveries along the way."
The coprolites contained remains of fish, insects, larger animals and plants, some of which were unusually well preserved, including small beetles and semi-complete fish. Other coprolites contained bones chewed up by predators that, like today's hyenas, crushed bones to obtain salts and marrow.
The contents of coprolites from the first large herbivorous dinosaurs, the long-necked sauropods, surprised the researchers. These contained large quantities of tree ferns, but also other types of plants, and charcoal. The palaeontologists hypothesise that charcoal was ingested to detoxify stomach contents, as ferns can be toxic to herbivores.
"The way to avoid extinction is to eat a lot of plants, which is exactly what the early herbivorous dinosaurs did. The reason for their evolutionary success is a true love of green and fresh plant shoots," Niedzwiedzki concludes.