26 research outputs found

    Paleobiology of titanosaurs: reproduction, development, histology, pneumaticity, locomotion and neuroanatomy from the South American fossil record

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    Fil: García, Rodolfo A.. Instituto de Investigación en Paleobiología y Geología. Museo Provincial Carlos Ameghino. Cipolletti; ArgentinaFil: Salgado, Leonardo. Instituto de Investigación en Paleobiología y Geología. General Roca. Río Negro; ArgentinaFil: Fernández, Mariela. Inibioma-Centro Regional Universitario Bariloche. Bariloche. Río Negro; ArgentinaFil: Cerda, Ignacio A.. Instituto de Investigación en Paleobiología y Geología. Museo Provincial Carlos Ameghino. Cipolletti; ArgentinaFil: Carabajal, Ariana Paulina. Museo Carmen Funes. Plaza Huincul. Neuquén; ArgentinaFil: Otero, Alejandro. Museo de La Plata. Universidad Nacional de La Plata; ArgentinaFil: Coria, Rodolfo A.. Instituto de Paleobiología y Geología. Universidad Nacional de Río Negro. Neuquén; ArgentinaFil: Fiorelli, Lucas E.. Centro Regional de Investigaciones Científicas y Transferencia Tecnológica. Anillaco. La Rioja; Argentin

    Reconstruction of Middle Jurassic dinosaur-dominated communities from the vertebrate ichnofauna of the Cleveland Basin of Yorkshire, UK

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    Globally, skeletal remains of dinosaurs are particularly rare throughout much of the Middle Jurassic. Thus, other sources of evidence, and most importantly ichnofaunas, are important indicators of the contemporary terrestrial vertebrate communities. The outcrops of the Ravenscar Group (Aalenian-Bajocian) within the Cleveland Basin of Yorkshire, UK, which have recently been recognised as a megatracksite of global significance, provide one such major source of ichnofaunal information of this age. A comprehensive database on the variety and occurrence of dinosaur and other vertebrate traces within the Ravenscar Group has been built from a long-term and detailed study of the sequence. Thirty different and distinct morphotypes of vertebrate traces have been recognised and are being analysed and further differentiated morphometrically. Some of the morphotypes represent behavioural, preservational and perhaps ontogenetic variants of other morphotypes, but nevertheless the range of quadrupedal and bipedal prints allows an overall fauna of sauropod, stegosaurian, ornithopod and theropod dinosaurs along with crocodiles, pond turtles and fish to be reconstructed. The distribution and abundance of prints and print types within the succession shows evidence of environmental control on the behaviour and distribution of the vertebrates. Case studies highlight both the advantages and disadvantages of this type of data in reconstructing palaeocommunities

    Predator-prey body size, interaction strength and the stability of a real food web.

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    1. We examined the empirical relationship between predator–prey body size ratio and interaction strength in the Ythan Estuary food web. 2. We have refined a previously published version of the food web and explored how size-based predatory effects might affect food web dynamics. To do so, we used four predatory species Crangon crangon (Linnaeus), Carcinus maenas (Linnaeus), Pomatoschistus microps (Krøyer) and Platichthys flesus (Linnaeus) and one common prey species Corophium volutator (Pallas) from the food web. 3. All predators and prey were sorted into small, medium and large size classes and placed into mesocosms in all possible pairwise combinations of size and species identity to determine per capita effects of predators on prey (aij). 4. Using Lotka–Volterra dynamics the empirical body size relationships obtained from these experiments and other relationships already available for the Ythan Estuary, we parameterized a food web model for this system. The local stability properties of the resulting food web models were then determined. 5. We found that by choosing interaction strengths using an empirically defined scaling law, the resulting food web models are always dynamically stable, despite the residual uncertainties in the modelling approach. This contrasts with the statistical expectation that random webs with random parameters have a vanishingly improbable chance of stability. 6. The patterning of predator and prey body sizes in real ecosystems affects the arrangement of interaction strengths, which in turn determines food web stability
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