![]() rex example was also interpreted as scavenging, similar to what we saw in our study. ![]() “We actually do think other theropods probably exhibited this behavior, but before our study, it was previously documented in only two other groups: T. However, it isn’t the only one that got desperate during dry spells. If it really did devour the corpses of its own kind, which is more likely than just a fight since there are no signs of healing on bones with those marks, this is the first evidence of cannibalism in this species of dinosaur. With teeth like serrated knives, Allosaurus had a bite that is still identifiable over a hundred million years later. Theropods also tended to avoid chewing on bone to get to the marrow, while the opposite has been documented in ancient mammals. Whether that is because scavenging behavior is not well documented, or because museums only want the the most pristine fossils to show off, remains something of a mystery. Credit: Stephanie Drumheller-Hortonīite marks are rare in dinosaur bones. If times are lean, the ability to change over to another food resource can help get animals through tough times.”Īllosaurus tooth marks on the bones of something it wasn't expected to be eating. “Being an opportunistic generalist, which is how we interpret Allosaurus, can give a predator an edge though. Even rats in major cities are becoming particularly aggressive and resorting to cannibalism,” Drumheller-Horton said. Meat-eaters generally won’t turn down a free or convenient meal, especially if food is becoming scarce. “Many modern-day predators will scavenge or even cannibalize one another. ![]() It is possible that one might have killed the other in the process and taken advantage of the free meal. Such marks could have also been made by two Allosaurus fighting each other, especially over what was left of something’s rotting flesh. This monster also fed on (and was fed on by) other carnivorous dinosaurs such as Ceratosaurus. During tough times for predators, anything that dropped dead was up for grabs, including the same species, as Drumheller-Horton found out from Allosaurus bones that were slashed with marks from the teeth of other Allosaurus. Problems arose when many of those watering holes vanished during the dry season, taking the supply of easy meals with them.Īllosaurus would have had to put in much more effort to find its dinner when a harsh dry season brought hunger. During the wet season, water levels would rise high enough for the landscape to have plenty of watering holes where predators like Allosaurus would ambush their prey. Previous studies of the prehistoric environment at that site revealed that it would have encountered wet and dry seasons. Rex, left behind tooth marks that could have meant cannibalism. Allosaurus, a vicious carnivore comparable to T. Credit: Stephanie Drumheller-Hortonĭrumheller-Horton and her research team, who recently published a study in PLOS ONE, investigated theropod remains that were unearthed from the Mygatt-Moore quarry in what is now Colorado. ![]() The tooth of an Allosaurus, which could easily double as a steak knife. This gave a whole succession of predators, scavengers, and decomposers a turn at breaking down the remains further.” “Any animal that died would have stuck around on the landscape for months, if not years. “If prey was scarce - for example, if the dry season was particularly harsh, predators probably turned to any resource they could find,” paleontologist Stephanie Drumheller-Horton of the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, told SYFY WIRE. Without herbivorous prey, the carnivores would succumb to starvation, and those that survived and hungered for flesh didn’t have much of a bias against gnawing on their own dead. Sometimes those watering holes dried up, which meant plants would also wilt, and as sauropod dinosaurs that depended on those plants perished, things got dire. The Late Jurassic was dominated by theropod (which appropriately means “beast-foot”) predators like Allosaurus, which usually ambushed prey hanging out at watering holes. Dinosaurs sometimes had to deal with famine - and that was when they turned to eating each other. Around 150 million years ago, things weren’t always as lush as Jurassic Park made it seem.
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