Auckland Scientist Models How Giant Dinosaurs Dispersed Seeds
A new study from the
University of Auckland looks at the animals’ roles in
moving seeds from one place to another. Evidence from
fossils indicates that seeds consumed by dinosaurs could
remain intact in their stomachs, suggesting a possible role
in helping plants to spread in the prehistoric
world. That led Professor George Perry, of the School
of Environment, to look at how far dinosaurs may have spread
the seeds, by modelling the animals’ likely travel speeds
along with their likely frequency of defecation – both
factors that can be estimated from body weight. His
work suggests that an optimum seed spreader might have been
a dinosaur such as Triceratops, which may have
weighed eight to 10 tonnes and moved at a maximum speed of
around 25 kilometres per hour. Another dinosaur of similar
body mass and potential seed dispersal capacity was
Stegosaurus, which may have weighed six to eight
tonnes. These dinosaurs may have spread seeds on
average as far as 4 to 5 kilometres and in rare cases more
than 30 kilometres. To Professor Perry, the work
points to the complex relationships of living things within
ecosystems – a topic that’s especially relevant as the
world experiences what some scientists describe as the
“sixth mass extinction.” ``When we think about
extinct animals, it’s easy to just think of a long list
– but in fact they all played inter-linked roles in our
ecosystems.” His article on dinosaurs and seeds,
just published in the journal Biology Letters, draws
on his ongoing and unpublished research with colleagues at
Manaaki Whenua – Landcare Research into the roles that
extinct New Zealand birds such as moa, huia and giant geese
may have played in dispersing seeds. It also adds to
previous speculation on the role that dinosaurs may have
played in spreading plants. Fossilised plants with
features that suggest they may have been dispersed by
animals date as far back as 280 million years – and seeds
from fossilised gut contents are just as old. Still,
understanding exactly what role dinosaurs played in helping
plants to spread may be difficult or impossible to establish
from the fossil record. While dinosaurs certainly moved
seeds, scientists don’t know anything about the
germination of those seeds. Professor Perry took on
the project during the Covid-19 lockdowns, intrigued at
tackling the habits of the largest land animals that ever
existed – and happy to have an alternative to another Zoom
call. Link to published paper: https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/rsbl.2020.0689It’s
an insight into ecosystems that existed more than 65 million
years ago, when dinosaurs roamed the
earth.
Dinosaurs
went extinct about 65 million years ago.