The below statement is incorrect.
Tyrannosaurus DID NOT undergo an exceptional ontogenetic change. Such a radical and recent fantasy is obsolete and should not be repeated, much the same as claiming that no dinosaurs were feathered (I used to get severely criticized for feathering my dinosaur illustrations, imagine that).
The modern fantasy that growing Tyrannosaurus had wild and weird growth started in 1999 JVP in which Carr mistakenly believed that Gorgo lost teeth with growth. Despite that being immediately refuted, the myth that Nano, Stygi, Jane, Petey, Bloody Mary were baby Tyrannos even though at least some of them are not tyrannosaurids for no good reason has grown into the establishment norm (kind of like dinos are not birds becoming the paleostandard). Despite Larson and others showing otherwise, including the big big hands of some lithe specimens.
We know Tyranno grew up in the tyrannosaurid norm. we know that because as Longrich and Saitta pointed out last year, and me this year (and Burnham et al. 2018 concerning the KUVP specimen), there are about seven actual, real, bonafide juvenile Tyrannosaurus! They have the same tooth counts as the grownups, the teeth are more like the adults, and they lack the prominent dentary groove,etc (Fig. 8A-D). This is now in the peer reviewed literature. These juveniles are in full accord with the growth of other tyrannosaurids such a Gorgo and Tarbo. Some who continue say that Tyrannosaurus grew in an odd manner have it would seem to not have bothered to read these open access papers (this includes Carr who in an online post said "Although I haven't read the article or supp info in detail, my impression is that hasn't meaningfully engaged with the critique of Carr & Napoli et al. (2022) and so his new article is just a repetition of Paul et al. (2022)," which is as off base of C et al. 22 claiming that Paul et al. 22 used only 2 characters, and that we used different sides of dentaries to produce incisor ratios which is silly, and much of the Supplementary is a discussion of the many flaws of C et al. 22). Read the papers before commenting on them. If you then can in some manner refute the now published data do so. Otherwise if you autorepeat the false belief that Tyranno growth was atypical you are being inaccurate, the fossils show it was not. Thanks for that knocking that off as I have no doubt all will do.
But seriously now, with no decrease in tooth count in growing Tyrannosaurus, why are people going on and on and on about how some marine ichthyosaurs lost teeth, or a basal reptile with hollow teeth set atop its jaw rims, and a small set of basal theropods who had beaks as grownups? (I do not object to such being noted, but how some then appear to claim this is a major item in the TT-zone tyrannosaur taxa debate). Or whales losing teeth with maturity. Or that some big Tyrannos have evidence of shifts in teeth when their young had the same tooth low tooth counts, what is the issue here? (And did albertos and tarbos not have similar tooth position alterations? Have you folks looked?). These come across like Feduccia's and friend's attempts to wave away feathered dinosaurs.
The variation in the anatomy of small TT-zone tyrannosaurs is astonishing. In tooth counts and form, dentary grooves, other skull details and overall shape, apparently limb proportions. This is not true in Gorgo. This is not true in Tarbo (the small skulls that are different from juv Tarbo are Alio). It is not true as far as I know in any dinosaur, or reptile, or animal. So somehow Tyranno is so special that all these skull types as they grew up whether or not they started out with the adult tooth count and skull form or not, ended up with the same low tooth count and skull form? Where else does that happen?
Among creatures, the juveniles are similar in form. In many species the adults are too. But in many species as growth occurs the girls and the boys diverge in via via dimorphism. I don't think there are examples of growing animals that start out diverse in osteology, and then converge to being much more similar in the adults. Are they any examples that show the same is likely to have occurred in Tyrannosaurus?
And how are Jane and Petey young Tyranno when their bone rings show that were subadults slowing growth in their teens, at the same time actual growing Tyranno were standing on the growth pedals fast accelerating their wonder years growth?
Gilmore set the solid, comparative anatomy and ontogeny parsimony and null hypothesis science standard in 42 when he made Nano into a new taxon rather than a juv Tyranno. The Tyranno grew like a fish model is a new and radical notion of the new century that was never in accord with known beakless nonmarine diapsids, and has been further disproven with the identification of actual growing Tyrannos, and the big hands of the basal eutyrannosaurs of the TT-zone.
Because of the Carr and company errors, the study of TT-zone tyrannosaurus has been tied up in a simplistic dogmatic manner for a quarter century. So much so that the rigidity continues. We now know that adult Tyrannosaurus exhibit remarkable diversity in postorbital display boss form which is a classic species identification feature than is seen in any other tyrannosaurid taxa, or even all other tyrannosaurids combined. (An online comment claimed this is fossil distortion, but such is not seen in other tyrannosaurids, the bosses on similar on both sides of a given skull, and they chart out stratigraphically). There is more Tyrannosaurus diversity in dental and cranial proportions than all other tyrannosaurids combined. There is the extreme diversity of the small specimens in which some are exactly what one expects in actual juv Tyranno but most do not even fit into Tyrannosauridae. And Appalachia where they came from had jut been re-attached to Laramidia. It is obvious what was going down in the latest Maastrichtian, and it is not the ETRH.
What should be happening is everyone saying like wow cool man there are all these Tyrannosaurus species and let's be looking into how many there were and when and how they evolved. And like wow cool man there were all these big handed, many toothed lithe taxa running around in the Tyrannosaurus habitat competing with the actual Tyranno juveniles and how did that work out. And how many taxa were there and when, and where did they come from?
So far there has been none of that forward, innovative thinking on this list, or in the dinocommunity in general. None. That is an embarrassment. Instead it is the same old, dreary dour nonsense about somehow the incredible diversity of TT-zone tyrannosaurs great and small can all be somehow if biological norms are waved away squeezed into just one beloved species in gross violation of biology and parsimony. Without positive evidence to the contrary offered up. And those of us having to blow time pointing out how absurd that is -- just as we rolled our eyes at non feathered, ectothermic dinosaurs back in the 70s-90s.
Why are people repeating the mistake of Tarsitano, Martin, Feduccia, Ruben, Czerkas, Lingham-Solair in going on and on and on about no dinosaurs were feathered for decades? The everything was T. rex hypothesis is as dead as non-avian dinosaurs. The ETRH is about to take another torpedo when Bloody Mary is published. The Zanno team has the funding and will get the report out in the not distant future. They have signaled the results by not referring the fossil to Tyranno in the same sentence they label the other Triceratops. The ETRH is like the Titanic an hour and a half after it hit the berg, going down fast and not enough boats to get off. Why are people so enamored of going down with the ETRH ship? As did those who denied birds are dinos?
The question is not whether there were multiple taxa, but how many and why. Franco is right in that the defense of the ETRH is passe, and it is time to move on with discussion about the far more fascinating discussion of what was really going down in the TT-zone.
Item. T. rex specimens make up around a third of the adult Tyrannosaurus that can be assigned to species, with it being about equal in numbers to the contemporary T. regina. By my extremely rough and I'm presumably missing some, there are somewhere in the area of 70 TT-zone tyrannosaur specimens, of which approaching 20 are not Tyrannosaurus. In that case T. rex makes up just a sixth or less of the TT-zone eutyrannosuaur population. Now why would that be.
I have no doubt that even as earlier T. imperator is accepted there are those who will consider T. regina to be a sexual morph of T. rex. That is a possiblity, although as explained at length that is the inferior hypothesis. What do folks think about that?
And where did the baso-eutyrannosaurs come from? Appalachia which was the land of long handed dryptosaurs? Or at least some of them from elsewhere?
See, those are the interesting, real evolutionary paleo items folks could be discussing. Instead of on and on and on about the damn teeth of marine reptiles and mammals never mind that known juvenile Tyrannosaurus is the same tooth count as their parents.
Now is that too much to ask?
GSPaul