MAY 9, 2016
by Brett Smith
Paleontologists have debated for
years over whether or not ancient lizards called mosasaurs were warm-blooded.
Now, a new paper published in the
journal Palaeontology has found that the aquatic lizards were in fact
warm-blooded, also known as using “thermoregulation”.
"There was a paper published
in Science in 2010 reporting the thermoregulation in marine reptiles
at the time of the dinosaurs focusing on the iconic extinct taxa: ichthyosaurs,
plesiosaurs and mosasaurs," said author of the new study Alberto
Perez-Huerta, an associate professor of geology at the University of
Alabama. "This conclusion bothered me a bit because there was not a
warm-blooded member organism used for comparison, and we know that size can
matter in terms of thermoregulation."
How did the team come to this
conclusion?
To reach their conclusion, the
study team utilized an oxygen isotope analysis on mosasaur fossils in the
University of Alabama's collection and contrasted them to fossils of recognized
cold-blooded animals, like fish and turtles, from the same era, as well as the
remains of modern warm-blooded organisms like birds.
According to the study,
mosasaurs' body-temperatures were similar to the temperatures of contemporary,
warm-blooded sea birds, indicating mosasaurs were certainly warm-blooded. The
study indicated this tendency toward thermoregulation was regardless of the
size of mosasur genus or species. Body size also didn't factor into the
results.
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