London, Feb 2 : An advanced member of the largest group of dinosaurs ever to walk
the Earth still had a relatively puny brain, researchers say.
The
scientists analyzed the skull of 70-million-year-old fossils of the giant
dinosaur Ampelosaurus, discovered in 2007 in Cuenca, Spain, in the course of the
construction of a high-speed rail track connecting Madrid with Valencia. The
reptile was a sauropod, long-necked, long-tailed herbivores that were the
largest creatures ever to stride the Earth. More specifically, Ampelosaurus was
a kind of sauropod known as a titanosaur, many if not all of which had armorlike
scales covering their bodies.
Sauropod skulls are typically fragile, and
few have survived intact enough for scientists to learn much about their brains.
By scanning the interior of the skull via CT imaging, the researchers developed
a 3-D reconstruction of Ampelosaurus' brain, which was not much bigger than a
tennis ball.
"This saurian may have reached 15 meters (49 feet) in
length; nonetheless its brain was not in excess of 8 centimeters (3 inches),"
study researcher Fabien Knoll, a paleontologist at Spain's National Museum of
Natural Sciences, said in a statement.
The first sauropods appeared
about 160 million years earlier than this fossil.
"We don't see much
expansion of brain size in this group of animals as they go through time, unlike
a lot of mammalian and bird groups, where you see increases in brain size over
time," researcher Lawrence Witmer, an anatomist and paleontologist at Ohio
University, told LiveScience. "They apparently hit on something and stuck with
it — expansion of brain size over time wasn't a major focus of
theirs."
For years, scientists have wondered how the largest land animals
ever lived with such tiny brains. "Maybe we should flip that question on their
end — maybe we shouldn't ask how they could function with tiny brains, but what
are many modern animals doing with such ridiculously large brains. Cows may be
triple-Einsteins compared to most dinosaurs, but why?" Witmer said.
Their
computer model also revealed the ampelosaur had a small inner ear.
"Part
of the inner ear is associated with hearing, so the fact it had a small inner
ear means it probably wasn't all that good at hearing airborne sounds," Witmer
said. "It probably used a kind of hearing we don't think much about, which
depends on sounds transmitted through the ground."
The inner ear is also
responsible for balance and equilibrium, Witmer said.
"Given what we know
about its inner ear, Ampelosaurus probably didn't put a real premium on rapid,
quick jerky eye or head movements, which makes sense — these are relatively
large, slow-moving, plant-eating animals," he said.
Knoll and his
colleagues had previously developed 3-D reconstructions of another sauropod,
Spinophorosaurus nigeriensis. In contrast to Ampelosaurus, Spinophorosaurus had
a fairly developed inner ear.
"It is quite enigmatic that sauropods show
such a diverse inner ear morphology whereas they have a very homogenous body
shape," Knoll said. "More investigation is definitely
required."
Currently scientists are debating whether sauropods held their
heads near the ground, grazing on low vegetation, or high up like giraffes to
browse on high leaves. "It could be that learning more about the inner ear could
tell us what sauropod neck posture was like," Witmer
said.
Ends
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Biggest dinosaurs had brains the size of tennis balls
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