Vegetarian dinosaurs differed in ways in which they ate, study by UK scientists shows

A life size anatomically correct Tyrannosaurus Rex dinosaur sculpture made from tin by David Huni in amongst cycads in the Cycad Amphitheatre at the World Heritage Site Kirstenbosch Botanical Gardens in Cape Town. l EPA/NIC BOTHMA

A life size anatomically correct Tyrannosaurus Rex dinosaur sculpture made from tin by David Huni in amongst cycads in the Cycad Amphitheatre at the World Heritage Site Kirstenbosch Botanical Gardens in Cape Town. l EPA/NIC BOTHMA

Published Jan 5, 2023

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Johannesburg – While most early dinosaurs were vegetarian, there were a surprising number of differences in the way that they ate a plant-based diet, a new study has revealed.

Research was conducted by scientists from the Natural History Museum and the Universities of Birmingham and Bristol whose findings were published in biweekly peer-reviewed scientific journal Current Biology.

These scientists used Computerised Tomography (CT) scans of dinosaur skulls to track the evolution of early dinosaur herbivores. They also reconstructed jaw muscles and measured the animals’ bite force to understand how dinosaur feeding evolved.

Five skulls from the plant-eating group Ornithischia provided the key to unlocking their feeding habits. These were the Heterodontosaurus, Lesothosaurus, Scelidosaurus, Hypsilophodon and Psittacosaurus, which are the earliest representatives of what would become the major herbivore dinosaur groups.

Later ornithischian dinosaurs, like Triceratops and Stegosaurus, showed a wide range of adaptations to eating plants. Their early relatives haven’t been examined properly, until now.

The research found that Heterodontosaurus appeared to have large jaw muscles relative to its skull size – producing a high bite force, ideal for consuming tough vegetation. Scelidosaurus had a similar bite force, but relatively smaller jaw muscles compared to its skull.

However, these animals had a greater overall body size and could achieve a strong bite. The research found that this was in contrast to the Hypsilophodon skull that didn’t have big muscles. Instead, these dinosaurs reoriented their muscles, to bite more efficiently but with less muscle force.

Dr Stephan Lautenschlager, from the University of Birmingham, explained that they discovered that each dinosaur tackled the problems posed by a plant-based diet by adopting very different eating techniques.

“Some compensated for low eating performance through their sheer size, while others developed bigger jaw muscles, increased jaw system efficiency, or combined these approaches,” he said.

“Although these animals looked very similar, their individual solutions to the same problems illustrated the unpredictable nature of evolution.”

In addition and contrary to popular belief, most dinosaurs were plant eaters, although they are all descended from a carnivorous ancestor.

The researchers believe that much was already known about how different dinosaurs consumed their food, but relatively little was understood about how they evolved their preferred eating styles.

And after CT scanning the skulls, the team reconstructed the jaw muscles using data from birds and crocodiles to help indicate where the muscles would have been. They then carried out a “finite element analysis”, which involves dividing the skull into thousands of individual parts (called elements).

The bite force these muscles can generate is calculated based on their size and arrangement. Each skull was then simulated to bite an imaginary object to see how the different elements respond to the applied force.

These models generate heat maps, showing the areas of the skull that are strongly stressed and those that are not very stressed. The results revealed that although all of these dinosaurs were eating plants, they each had different ways of doing it.

Senior author and palaeontologist at the Museum of Natural History, Professor Paul Barrett, said that in order to understand how dinosaurs diversified into so many different types so effectively, it is critical to learn how they evolved to feed on a such a wide variety of vegetation in so many ways.

“This diversity in feeding mechanisms set them up to dominate life on land for millions of years to come.”

Dr David Button, lead author of the study, who conducted the work at the museum but is now a researcher at the University of Bristol, added that when they compared the functional performance of the skull and teeth of these plant-eating dinosaurs, they found significant differences in the relative sizes of the jaw muscles, bite forces and jaw strength between them.

“This showed that these dinosaurs, although looking somewhat similar, had evolved very different ways to tackle a diet of plants.

“This research helps us understand how animals evolve to occupy new ecological niches. It shows that even similar animals adopting similar diets won't always evolve the same characteristics. This highlights how innovative and unpredictable evolution can be.”