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Did Dreadnoughtus Really Have Air Sacs?
Live Science
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9 hours ago
Beloved sauropod Dreadnoughtus is featured in the Apple TV+ show PREHISTORIC PLANET, episode 2 "Deserts." Paleontologist Dr. Kenneth Lacovara discusses their presentation and how accurate the dinosaurs were depicted.
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00:00
it was a quite a long scene of dreadnoughtus uh here they are um a fight scene there was a fight
00:07
scene uh in this um territorial battle between males and i i think this was actually kind of
00:14
based on our science because um what we found with the two dreadnoughtus individuals
00:20
is that the the much larger one the 65 ton one was osteologically that means its bones was
00:27
osteologically quite young you might even think of it as a as a teenager who was growing rapidly at
00:32
the time of its death whereas the one that we found that was one third smaller uh osteologically was
00:40
much much older and so where do you find this in animals today where you find older smaller
00:45
individuals and younger bigger individuals that's in species where you have um sexual dimorphism where
00:51
the two sexes are of different sizes and usually that happens where you have male dominated sexual
00:58
sexual selection which means that uh two alpha males are going to compete with each other to
01:04
control a territory or a group of females there's also female dominated sexual selection that's where
01:09
you see the males showing off with all kinds of colors and doing fancy tricks and buying corvettes
01:14
and things like that um and so with dreadnoughtus we have just a hint you know that we have sexual
01:23
dimorphism and then kind of a hint based on a hint that maybe it was male dominated sexual selection
01:29
and that's what you are seeing here and then um these air sacs we got to talk about these air
01:35
sacs yeah let's talk about the air sacs what do you think about that well the air sacs are kind of hard
01:39
to miss um i have to tell you that there is zero evidence that dreadnoughtus had air sacs uh these
01:46
are pneumatic gular pouches like a grouse would have today is it impossible no it's not impossible
01:55
but we don't have any evidence that they do have that now i was told by the consultant on the show
02:02
that um they wanted to find a way to illustrate the fact that extinct animals must have had amazing
02:10
soft tissue structures that will never be preserved in the fossil record which is certainly true if we
02:15
only knew elephants from their skeletons i probably wouldn't really know what an elephant looked like
02:22
so this is an example of a hypothetical feature that maybe we're missing completely in the fossil
02:28
record that could have existed did they specifically have this probably not is it impossible that they
02:36
had this no it's also not but we don't have any evidence of it what we do have though is we have
02:41
their cervical vertebrae cervical vertebrae and um the cervical vertebrae are very pneumatic meaning that
02:49
they have a system of air tubes and air bladders um that invade the bone over the lifetime of the
02:56
animal so the the bone becomes more honeycomb with air over time making it very light but still
03:02
retaining most of the strength because if you have a 40 foot long neck right a 40 foot long lever
03:07
you don't want to put a lot of weight at the end of that lever so they have these very lightly built
03:12
pneumatic necks which i guess gave them the idea okay there's there's air in the neck there's a lot of
03:18
air in the neck why not something like a like male grouses in the breeding season that have these
03:23
pneumatic cooler pouches that pop out like that thinking of a story of droid nanas
03:31
i know it's always interesting to draw inspiration from modern creatures there he goes i guess we'll
03:38
have to hold out for any more fossil or soft tissue preservation yeah you know there's certain things
03:44
that we're just never going to know and we kind of have to live with that disappointment um but there are
03:50
a lot of soft tissue features that extinct creatures have that we're just never going to find um we can
03:56
make inferences about them sometimes we can do that from um molecular work with modern creatures we can
04:02
look at the dna from from groups of related creatures and kind of figure out where that trait must have
04:09
started occasionally you get um soft tissue structures preserved if you have very uh clay deposits that can
04:19
preserve that kind of resolution but that's very rare and i don't see that scenario happening for big
04:23
things like sauropods that happens for little things like birds um and then you know there's always the
04:29
promise of molecular paleontology where you know we routinely cover now recover um blood vessels and
04:36
blood cells and proteins from dinosaurs and other extinct creatures um a few dna bases have been recovered
04:43
is it possible we'll have a genome of a dinosaur of a lion avian dinosaur of the future you know it's
04:50
it's a pretty high mountain to climb but i can't say that it's impossible
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