Scientists recreate oviraptor nest to study egg hatching

Taiwanese researchers built a life-size model of an oviraptor nest to investigate how these dinosaurs incubated their eggs. Their experiments indicate a hybrid method involving parental warmth and sunlight, differing from modern birds. This approach explains uneven heating and asynchronous hatching in nests.

Researchers from Taiwan's National Museum of Natural Science conducted experiments to understand oviraptor nesting behavior, as detailed in a study published in Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution. They recreated a nest based on Heyuannia huangi, an oviraptor species from 70 to 66 million years ago in present-day China. The dinosaur measured about 1.5 meters long and weighed around 20kg, with eggs arranged in double rings in semi-open nests. The model used polystyrene foam for the torso, a wooden frame, cotton, bubble paper, and fabric for tissues, plus resin eggs mimicking fossils. Heat transfer simulations and physical tests assessed temperature variations under different conditions with and without the brooding adult present. In colder settings, outer ring eggs showed up to 6°C differences, potentially causing eggs in the same nest to hatch at staggered times. Warmer environments reduced this to 0.6°C, suggesting sunlight's role in evening out heat. Senior author Dr. Tzu-Ruei Yang stated, 'We show the difference in oviraptor hatching patterns was induced by the relative position of the incubating adult to the eggs.' First author Chun-Yu Su added, 'We obtained an estimate of the incubation efficiency of oviraptors, which is much lower than that of modern birds.' The ring arrangement prevented full contact incubation like in birds, leading to a co-incubation with environmental heat. Yang noted, 'Heat from the sun likely mattered much more than heat from the soil.' The team cautions that results use modern conditions, unlike the Late Cretaceous, and oviraptors probably had longer incubation periods. This work highlights distinct brooding strategies suited to environments.

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Realistic depiction of a frozen wolf pup with woolly rhinoceros in its stomach, scientists analyzing ancient DNA for extinction clues.
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Unique DNA analysis of extinct woolly rhinoceros in wolf stomach

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Researchers at the Swedish Centre for Palaeogenetics have analyzed DNA from an extinct woolly rhinoceros found in the stomach of a frozen wolf pup. The discovery, the first of its kind from the Ice Age, provides new clues about the species' extinction. The analysis suggests climate change likely caused the rhinoceros's disappearance rather than human hunting.

New research suggests that young dinosaurs became independent quickly, forming their own groups and occupying different ecological niches from their parents, unlike mammals with extended parental care. This distinction could reshape understandings of Mesozoic ecosystems. The study, led by Thomas R. Holtz Jr. from the University of Maryland, was published in the Italian Journal of Geosciences.

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A team of researchers has developed a technique to precisely date fossil sites by analyzing uranium and lead in dinosaur eggshells. This method provides accurate ages without relying on surrounding minerals, offering a breakthrough for paleontology. The approach was tested on samples from Utah and Mongolia, yielding results within five percent accuracy.

Palaeontologists announced several striking dinosaur finds this year, spanning from heavily armoured herbivores to fierce predators. These discoveries, reported across various global sites, offer fresh insights into prehistoric life. Highlights include a dome-headed species from Mongolia and an early bird-like fossil from China.

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A nearly complete skeleton of a small predatory dinosaur discovered in Argentina has revealed new details about the evolution of alvarezsaurs. The 95-million-year-old Alnashetri cerropoliciensis weighed just 700 grams and challenges previous ideas about their anatomy and diet. Researchers suggest it had a broader range of prey than previously thought.

King penguins on Possession Island are breeding earlier due to rising temperatures, leading to higher chick survival rates. While this has boosted chick numbers from 44 percent in 2000 to 62 percent in 2023, researchers warn that shifting food sources could threaten the population in the future. The changes highlight rapid environmental shifts in the Southern Ocean.

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Scientists have reconstructed the genome of a woolly rhinoceros from a fragment of flesh found in the stomach of a wolf pup that died 14,400 years ago in Siberia. The analysis reveals the rhino was genetically healthy, with no signs of inbreeding, challenging theories about the causes of its extinction. This discovery provides the closest genetic insight yet into the species just before it vanished.

 

 

 

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