Ten more years of discovery: revisiting the quality of the sauropodomorph dinosaur fossil record

Daniel Cashmore, Philip Mannion, Paul Upchurch, Richard Butler

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Citation (Scopus)
210 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Spatiotemporal changes in fossil specimen completeness can bias our understanding of a group's evolutionary history. The quality of the sauropodomorph fossil record was assessed a decade ago, but the number of valid species has since increased by 60%, and 17% of the taxa from that study have since undergone taxonomic revision. Here, we assess how 10 years of additional research has changed our outlook on the group's fossil record. We quantified the completeness of all 307 sauropodomorph species currently considered valid using the skeletal completeness metric, which calculates the proportion of a complete skeleton preserved for each taxon. Taxonomic and stratigraphic age revisions, rather than new species, are the drivers of the most significant differences between the current results and those of the previous assessment. No statistical differences appeared when we use our new dataset to generate temporal completeness curves based solely on taxa known in 2009 or 1999. We now observe a severe drop in mean completeness values across the Jurassic–Cretaceous boundary that never recovers to pre-Cretaceous levels. Explaining this pattern is difficult, as we find no convincing evidence that it is related to environmental preferences or body size changes. Instead, it might result from: (1) reduction of terrestrial fossil preservation space due to sea level rise; (2) ecological specificities and relatively high diagnosability of Cretaceous species; and/or (3) increased sampling of newly explored sites with many previously unknown taxa. Revisiting patterns in this manner allows us to test the longevity of conclusions made in previous quantitative studies.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)951-978
Number of pages28
JournalPalaeontology
Volume63
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 18 Jul 2020

Keywords

  • Sauropodomorpha
  • body size
  • completeness
  • fossil record
  • sampling bias
  • skeletal

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
  • Palaeontology

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