Ben Creisler
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Thomas R. Holtz Jr. (2025)
Bringing up baby: preliminary exploration of the effect of ontogenetic niche partitioning in dinosaurs versus long-term maternal care in mammals in their respective ecosystems
Italian Journal of Geosciences 145: f.2
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.3301/IJG.2026.09https://www.italianjournalofgeosciences.it/297/article-1243/bringing-up-baby-preliminary-exploration-of-the-effect-of-ontogenetic-niche-partitioning-in-dinosaurs-versus-long-term-maternal-care-in-mammals-in-their-respective-ecosystems.htmlMesozoic dinosaurs and Cenozoic mammals are often regarded as broadly ecologically equivalent, as they included the majority of medium-to-large-bodied terrestrial vertebrates of their respective eras. One of the most significant differences between them is their mode of reproduction: oviparity and large clutch size regardless of adult body size in the former; viviparity and litter size decreasing with adult body size in the latter. Furthermore, the disparity between hatchling and adult body size is much greater in dinosaurs than neonate and adult body size in mammals on average. The effects of these differences are examined with regards to the size distribution and species richness in fossil communities. Species lists and estimated adult body sizes were assembled for Jurassic and Cretaceous dinosaur and Cenozoic mammal communities based on the instantaneous diversity within well-sampled formations. The distribution of adult sizes within communities were compared to cases in which earlier growth stages were included: dinosaur hatchling size was estimated from known egg sizes of related taxa, while mammalian neonate size was estimated from those of extant relatives. The size distribution including the entire ontogenetic series results in a greater shift of average body size in dinosaurian communities than in mammals due to the much smaller dinosaur baby size. However, these two sets of plots may not reflect the ecological realities of their respective communities. In many mammals the young are provisioned via lactation and later by provisioning by mothers until they are a substantial fraction of adult body size: thus, the adult-only plots for mammals may be accurate reflections in terms of the realised feeding community structure. In contrast, evidence for long-term parental care in non-avian dinosaurs is scanty for most clades, with many juvenile dinosaurs living (individually or in small groups) independently for most of their lives. Thus, due to these ontogenetic niche shifts, plots in which different growth stages are counted as their own “taxa” might more accurately represent the trophic ecology within dinosaurian communities. In this scenario, effective “species” counts are higher in dinosaurian communities compared to mammalian ones: a reversal of the situation when only adult size is examined.
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Luca Matteoni, Flavio Bellardini & Marco Romano (2025)
Uncovering Los Bastos: new titanosaur specimens and palaeoecological insights from the Santonian of Patagonia, Argentina
Italian Journal of Geosciences 145: f.1
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.3301/IJG.2026.08https://www.italianjournalofgeosciences.it/297/article-1241/uncovering-los-bastos-new-titanosaur-specimens-and-palaeoecological-insights-from-the-santonian-of-patagonia-argentina.htmlThe Bajo de la Carpa Formation (Santonian, Late Cretaceous) of the Neuquén Basin, Argentina, represents a critical stratigraphic interval for understanding the evolution and diversity of South American titanosaurians. This study presents the description and comparative analysis of newly recovered titanosaurian remains from the Los Bastos locality, located near Senillosa (Neuquén Province). The material includes both cranial and postcranial elements belonging to distinct individuals, including an isolated cranial bone, appendicular and pelvic fragments, and some anterior to middle caudal vertebrae. Sedimentological and taphonomic data indicate a dynamic floodplain environment with episodic burial conditions conducive to the preservation of both associated and weathered remains. Detailed morphological comparisons suggest the presence of titanosaurs morphologically compatible with both Colossosauria and Saltasauridae within the same stratigraphic horizon. Notably, an associated series of caudal vertebrae (MMS-PV-75) exhibits characters diagnostic of Aeolosaurinae, including procoelous-distoplatyan centra and laterally expanded transverse processes. A separate pelvic specimen (MMS-PV-82), composed of an ilium, a pubis, and an ischium, displays some features of Saltasauroidea representing the earliest known occurrence of this clade in the Neuquén Basin. The coexistence of colossosaurian and saltasaurid titanosaurs within a single depositional context challenges models positing a rapid faunal replacement and instead suggests a more gradual, overlapping diversification. The presence of putative theropod feeding traces on some bones adds a rare ichnological dimension to the palaeoecological reconstruction. Collectively, these findings provide new information on titanosaurian evolution during the Santonian highlighting the importance of the Bajo de la Carpa Formation as a key window into Late Cretaceous Gondwanan dinosaur faunas.