Cranial functional specialisation for strength precedes morphological evolution in Oviraptorosauria

Luke Meade*, Michael Pittman, Amy Balanoff, Stephan Lautenschlager

*Corresponding author for this work

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Abstract

Oviraptorosaurians were a theropod dinosaur group that reached high diversity in the Late Cretaceous. Within oviraptorosaurians, the later diverging oviraptorids evolved distinctive crania which were extensively pneumatised, short and tall, and had a robust toothless beak, interpreted as providing a powerful bite for their herbivorous to omnivorous diet. The present study explores the ability of oviraptorid crania to resist large mechanical stresses compared with other theropods and where this adaptation originated within oviraptorosaurians. Digital 3D cranial models were constructed for the earliest diverging oviraptorosaurian, Incisivosaurus gauthieri, and three oviraptorids, Citipati osmolskae, Conchoraptor gracilis, and Khaan mckennai. Finite element analyses indicate oviraptorosaurian crania were stronger than those of other herbivorous theropods (Erlikosaurus and Ornithomimus) and were more comparable to the large, carnivorous Allosaurus. The cranial biomechanics of Incisivosaurus align with oviraptorids, indicating an early establishment of distinctive strengthened cranial biomechanics in Oviraptorosauria, even before the highly modified oviraptorid cranial morphology. Bite modelling, using estimated muscle forces, suggests oviraptorid crania may have functioned closer to structural safety limits. Low mechanical stresses around the beaks of oviraptorids suggest a convergently evolved, functionally distinct rhamphotheca, serving as a cropping/feeding tool rather than for stress reduction, when compared with other herbivorous theropods.
Original languageEnglish
Article number436
Number of pages10
JournalCommunications Biology
Volume7
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 10 Apr 2024

Bibliographical note

Acknowledgments:
We thank Khishigjav Tsogtbaatar (MPC), Jolanta Kobylinska (ZPAL), Vladimir Alifanov (PIN), and Xing Xu (IVPP) for access to specimens in their care. We thank Andrew Cuff for 3D model data, Waisum Ma for discussion and photogrammetric data, and Jordan Bestwick, Richard Butler, Philip Cox, and Sam Giles for discussion on this study. This work was supported by a NERC doctoral studentship to L.E.M. through the Central England NERC Training Alliance (CENTA; Grant reference NE/L002493/1). M.P.’s participation in this study was supported by the School of Life Sciences of The Chinese University of Hong Kong.

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