Large dinosaur egg accumulations and their significance for understanding nesting behaviour

IF 8.5 1区 地球科学 Q1 GEOSCIENCES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Geoscience frontiers Pub Date : 2024-05-22 DOI:10.1016/j.gsf.2024.101872
L. Ezquerro , R. Coimbra , B. Bauluz , C. Núñez-Lahuerta , T. Román-Berdiel , M. Moreno-Azanza
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Abstract

The accurate identification of dinosaur egg accumulations as nests or clutches is crucial for understanding the reproductive behaviour of these extinct species. However, existing methods often rely on the presence of complete eggs and embryo remains, and sedimentological criteria that are only applicable to well-structured sediments. In this study, we introduce an innovative approach to characterize egg accumulations in structureless sediments, where traditional nest structures may not be preserved. Our methodology employs a unique combination of sedimentological, taphonomic, geochemical, and geophysical proxies for the study of egg accumulations. We applied this approach to the egg accumulation from Paimogo (Jurassic, Portugal), traditionally interpreted as a nest. Our findings reveal that the Paimogo egg assemblage is a secondary deposit, resulting from a flooding event in a fluvial plain that dismantled several allosauroid and crocodylomorph clutches. The eggshell vapor conductance results, coupled with sedimentological evidence, suggest that allosauroid dinosaurs buried their eggs in the dry terrain of overbank areas close to a main channel during the breeding season, likely during the dry season to prevent the embryos from drowning. This research underscores the necessity of multidisciplinary approaches in interpreting egg accumulations and offers a novel methodology for studying these accumulations in structureless sediments. Our findings provide new insights into the breeding behaviour and nesting preferences of these extinct organisms, contributing to our understanding of dinosaur ecology.

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大型恐龙蛋堆积及其对了解筑巢行为的意义
准确鉴定恐龙蛋堆积物是巢还是窝,对于了解这些已灭绝物种的繁殖行为至关重要。然而,现有的方法往往依赖于完整的蛋和胚胎残骸的存在,以及仅适用于结构良好的沉积物的沉积学标准。在这项研究中,我们引入了一种创新方法来描述无结构沉积物中的卵堆积特征,因为在这些沉积物中可能无法保存传统的巢穴结构。我们的方法独特地结合了沉积学、岩石学、地球化学和地球物理代用指标来研究虫卵堆积。我们将这一方法应用于 Paimogo(葡萄牙侏罗纪)的卵堆积,传统上将其解释为巢穴。我们的研究结果表明,Paimogo的卵堆积是一种二次沉积,是在河川平原发生的洪水事件中形成的,当时洪水冲垮了几个异齿兽和鳄形兽的巢穴。蛋壳蒸气传导结果以及沉积学证据表明,异齿龙在繁殖季节将蛋埋藏在靠近主河道的过岸区域的干燥地形中,这很可能是为了防止胚胎在旱季被淹死。这项研究强调了采用多学科方法解释卵堆积的必要性,并为研究无结构沉积物中的卵堆积提供了一种新方法。我们的发现为了解这些已灭绝生物的繁殖行为和筑巢偏好提供了新的视角,有助于我们了解恐龙生态学。
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来源期刊
Geoscience frontiers
Geoscience frontiers Earth and Planetary Sciences-General Earth and Planetary Sciences
CiteScore
17.80
自引率
3.40%
发文量
147
审稿时长
35 days
期刊介绍: Geoscience Frontiers (GSF) is the Journal of China University of Geosciences (Beijing) and Peking University. It publishes peer-reviewed research articles and reviews in interdisciplinary fields of Earth and Planetary Sciences. GSF covers various research areas including petrology and geochemistry, lithospheric architecture and mantle dynamics, global tectonics, economic geology and fuel exploration, geophysics, stratigraphy and paleontology, environmental and engineering geology, astrogeology, and the nexus of resources-energy-emissions-climate under Sustainable Development Goals. The journal aims to bridge innovative, provocative, and challenging concepts and models in these fields, providing insights on correlations and evolution.
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