‘Cows of Cretaceous’ grew much faster than enemies

This photo compares the size of a juvenile and adult Hypacrosaurus skull. (Photo courtesy of Jack Horner).
This photo compares the size of a juvenile and adult Hypacrosaurus skull. (Photo courtesy of Jack Horner).
Duck-billed dinosaurs, once so common that they’re called the “cows of the Cretaceous,” grew three to five times faster than their predators. That made it easier for them to elude their enemies and thrive during the Late Cretaceous Period, says a paper published Aug. 6 by a former honors student at Montana State University.

Lisa Noelle Cooper, who graduated in 1999 in biological sciences, is the lead author of a paper published in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. She is now using the techniques she learned at MSU’s Museum of the Rockies and studying the evolution of whales for her doctoral degree at Kent State University. She is also conducting research at the Northeastern Ohio Universities College of Medicine. Her MSU co-authors on the dinosaur paper were ecologist Mark Taper and paleontologist Jack Horner.

Horner said scientists suspected that the plant-eating dinosaur known as the Hypacrosaurus grew quickly because its cousin, the Maiasaura, did. Cooper proved it by comparing the growth rings in the leg bone of a Hypacrosaurus with those in three of its meat-eating enemies — a Tyrannosaurus rex, Albertosaurus and Troodon.

Cooper found that the Hypacrosaurus probably reached 95 percent of its full size by the time it was 10-12 years old. That was at least twice as fast as the Troodon in her study and up to five times faster than the tyrannosaurs.

“It was interesting to find that the hadrosaurs were growing so much faster than the meat eaters,” Horner said. “It makes sense. That’s a good survival tactic.

“Obviously, when we think about how evolution works, there’s natural selection,” he added. “Animals that grow faster are going to be selected because they are survivors.”


The Hypacrosaurus was a plant-eating dinosaur related to the Maiasaurus. (Illustration courtesy of Lisa Cooper).
The Hypacrosaurus was a plant-eating dinosaur related to the Maiasaurus. (Illustration courtesy of Lisa Cooper).
Cooper said she grew up thinking that dinosaurs were big and slow. To discover that plant-eating dinosaurs grew so quickly, and the difference between herbivores and carnivores was so pronounced was “a pretty startling find.”

“We think that Hypacrosaurus was under evolutionary pressure from predators, and because they lack the ability to run fast or have horns for physical defense, Hypacrosaurus instead grew rapidly,” she said.

Horner said Cooper started her study while at MSU. Cooper said she met Horner during her sophomore year when they co-taught an Honors Program literature course called “Imagination.” She was planning to leave MSU the following year to study pre-med in Texas, but Horner convinced her to stay at MSU and do research in his lab.

“I did stay at MSU, but had no idea how much that would radically alter my life,” she said. “Because of Jack’s mentoring, I am still answering evolutionary questions with fossils and am thrilled to be a scientist. My time at the Museum of the Rockies was priceless, and to be given the opportunity to do research at one of the top dinosaur evolution labs in the world was gratifying and exciting. I couldn’t have asked for a better education.”

Cooper spent three summers collecting fossils with Horner and his field crew. During the school year, she studied paleohistlogy techniques in Horner’s lab. With funding from a variety of sources, she started studying growth rings in the bones of Hypacrosaurus stebingeri. She pursued the topic, Cooper said, because Horner and one of his colleagues, Nathan Myhrvold, had been brainstorming about it, and she was available to undertake novel research.

“Jack’s lab is one of the few in the world that regularly sections dinosaur bones and grinds them down until you can see light through them,” she said. “During fossilization, the shape of bone cells, and more importantly, growth rings are still preserved. For this study, we measured the distance between the growth rings and calculated the growth rate of Hypacrosaurus.”

Cooper’s Hypacrosaurus specimen came from the Museum of the Rockies where Horner is the Ameya Preserve curator of paleontology. Horner said his son, Jason, found the fossil in 1988 near Valier. It came from a full-grown hadrosaur that probably died when it was 13 years old.

The fossil itself is not unusual, Horner said, but it has yielded so much data over the years that paleontologists have used it in several studies. This particular specimen, called Hypacrosaurus stebingeri, was named after Eugene Stebinger. He was a geologist who, in 1917, named the formation where the specimen was found.

Cooper said Andrew H. Lee, Cooper’s co-author from Ohio University, furthered her original research by comparing growth rates of other carnivorous dinosaurs during the Late Cretaceous Period. The period ended about 65 million years ago.


Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by the Montana State University

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