Press Release, University of Toronto, 3/7/18
IMAGE: THIS IS A PICTURE OF CTENOSAURA
SP. MEXICO, COMMON NAME SPINY IGUANA, THAT HAS DROPPED AND REGENERATED ITS
TAIL! THIS KIND OF LIZARDS PROBABLY ONLY DROP THEIR TAILS WHEN SUFFICIENT.
CREDIT: AARON LEBLANC
Imagine that you're a voracious carnivore who
sinks its teeth into the tail of a small reptile and anticipates a delicious
lunch, when, in a flash, the reptile is gone and you are left holding a
wiggling tail between your jaws.
A new study by the University of Toronto
Mississauga research team led by Professor Robert Reisz and PhD student Aaron
LeBlanc, published March 5 in the open source journal, Scientific Reports,
shows how a group of small reptiles who lived 289 million years ago could
detach their tails to escape the grasp of their would-be predators -- the oldest
known example of such behaviour. The reptiles, called Captorhinus, weighed less
than 2 kilograms and were smaller than the predators of the time. They were
abundant in terrestrial communities during the Early Permian period and are
distant relatives of all the reptiles today.
As small omnivores and herbivores,
Captorhinus and its relatives had to scrounge for food while avoiding being
preyed upon by large meat-eating amphibians and ancient relatives of mammals.
"One of the ways captorhinids could do this," says first author
LeBlanc, "was by having breakable tail vertebrae." Like many
present-day lizard species, such as skinks, that can detach their tails to
escape or distract a predator, the middle of many tail vertebrae had cracks in
them.
It is likely that these cracks acted like the
perforated lines between two paper towel sheets, allowing vertebrae to break in
half along planes of weakness. "If a predator grabbed hold of one of these
reptiles, the vertebra would break at the crack and the tail would drop off,
allowing the captorhinid to escape relatively unharmed," says Reisz, a
Distinguished Professor of Biology at the University of Toronto Mississauga.
The authors note that being the only reptiles
with such an escape strategy may have been a key to their success, because they
were the most common reptiles of their time, and by the end of the Permian
period 251 million years ago, captorhinids had dispersed across the ancient
supercontinent of Pangaea. This trait disappeared from the fossil record when
Captorhinus died out; it re-evolved in lizards only 70 million years ago.
They were able to examine more than 70 tail
vertebrae -- both juveniles and adults -- and partial tail skeletons with
splits that ran through their vertebrae. They compared these skeletons to those
of other reptilian relatives of captorhinids, but it appears that this ability
is restricted to this family of reptiles in the Permian period.
Using various paleontological and
histological techniques, the authors discovered that the cracks were features
that formed naturally as the vertebrae were developing. Interestingly, the
research team found that young captorhinids had well-formed cracks, while those
in some adults tended to fuse up. This makes sense, since predation is much greater
on young individuals and they need this ability to defend themselves.
###
This study was possible thanks to the
treasure trove of fossils available at the cave deposits near Richards Spur,
Oklahoma.
The study's research team was comprised of:
Reisz; LeBlanc, who is now a Killam Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of
Alberta; research assistant Diane Scott; graduate student Yara Haridy; and Dr.
Mark MacDougall, now a DAAD Postdoctoral Fellow at the Humboldt University.
Contact:
Professor Robert Reisz
Distinguished Professor of Biology
U of T Mississauga
647-830-5364
Aaron LeBlanc, Killam postdoctoral
fellow
University of Alberta, Department of
Biological Sciences
780-710-4699
Nicolle Wahl
Assistant Director, Communications, UTM
905-569-4656
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