PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Early dinosaurs grew up fast, but they weren’t the only ones

High growth rates apparently a common feature among early Mesozoic animals

Early dinosaurs grew up fast, but they weren’t the only ones
2024-04-03
(Press-News.org) The earliest dinosaurs had rapid growth rates, but so did many of the other animals living alongside them, according to a study published April 3, 2024 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Kristina Curry Rogers of Macalester College, Minnesota and colleagues.

Dinosaurs grew up fast, a feature that likely set them apart from many other animals in their Mesozoic (252 to 66 million years ago) ecosystems. Some researchers have proposed that these elevated growth rates were key to the global success of dinosaurs, but little is known about the growth strategies of the earliest dinosaurs. In this study, Rogers and colleagues performed histological analysis, examining patterns of bone tissue growth in the fossilized leg bones of an array of animals in one of the earliest known Mesozoic ecosystems.

The studied fossils come from the Ischigualasto Formation of Argentina and date between 231-229 million years old. Sampled fossils include several of the earliest known dinosaurs as well as several non-dinosaur reptiles and one early relative of mammals.

The analysis found that most of the examined species had elevated growth rates, more similar to some modern-day mammals and birds than to living reptiles. The early dinosaurs all exhibited particularly fast growth, but they weren’t alone in this, as similar growth rates were seen in several of the non-dinosaur reptiles as well.

These results show that the earliest dinosaurs were already fast growers, supporting the idea that this feature was important to their later success. But apparently dinosaurs were only one of multiple lineages evolving with elevated growth rates during the Triassic (252-201 million years ago), suggesting that this feature is only part of the story of dinosaurs’ eventual global prosperity. The authors note that future studies could expand on these preliminary results by sampling a wider variety of ancient animals from additional early Mesozoic fossil sites.

The authors add: “Our sample comes from a time in which dinosaurs were the new kids on the block, restricted to relatively small, basic body plans, and evolving within a world rich with a diverse array of more specialized, non-dinosaur reptiles. We tackled the question of how all of these animals grew, and found that the earliest dinosaurs grew quickly, and that these rapid growth rates probably played a significant role in dinosaurs’ subsequent ascent within Mesozoic ecosystems; but dinosaurs weren’t unique – many of their non-dino sidekicks shared rapid growth 230 million years ago.”

#####

In your coverage please use this URL to provide access to the freely available article in PLOS ONE: https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0298242

Citation: Curry Rogers K, Martínez RN, Colombi C, Rogers RR, Alcober O (2024) Osteohistological insight into the growth dynamics of early dinosaurs and their contemporaries. PLoS ONE 19(4): e0298242. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0298242

Author Countries: USA, Argentina

Funding: This work was supported the National Science Foundation CAREER Grant – EAR-0955716 to KCR and by the Wallace Faculty Travel Grant from Macalester College to KCR. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.

END

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Early dinosaurs grew up fast, but they weren’t the only ones Early dinosaurs grew up fast, but they weren’t the only ones 2

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Working outside the typical 9–5 in younger adulthood may be linked with worse health decades later

Working outside the typical 9–5 in younger adulthood may be linked with worse health decades later
2024-04-03
The hours you work earlier in life may be associated with worse health years later, according to a study published April 3, 2024 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Wen-Jui Han from New York University, US. Studies have consistently shown that nonstandard work schedules—working outside the traditional nine-to-five workday—can negatively impact physical and mental health as well as social and family life. The current study uses a life-course approach to provide a longer-term perspective on how work schedule ...

Demand for critical minerals puts African Great Apes at risk

Demand for critical minerals puts African Great Apes at risk
2024-04-03
A recent study led by researchers from the German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv), the Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg (MLU) and the non-profit conservation organization Re:wild shows that the threat of mining to the great ape population in Africa has been greatly underestimated. Their results have been published in Science Advances. The rising demand for critical minerals, such as copper, lithium, nickel, cobalt, and other rare earth elements required for the large-scale transition to cleaner energy is causing a surge of mining in Africa, where a large share of those mineral resources is still unexploited. ...

Tourism to Yellowstone National Park produces more than a billion kilos of CO2 emissions annually

Tourism to Yellowstone National Park produces more than a billion kilos of CO2 emissions annually
2024-04-03
Tourism to Yellowstone National Park produces more than a billion kilos of CO2 emissions annually, with 90% arising through travel to and from the park, especially from visitors arriving by plane. #### Article URL: https://journals.plos.org/climate/article?id=10.1371/journal.pclm.0000391 Article Title: Quantifying and evaluating strategies to decrease carbon dioxide emissions generated from tourism to Yellowstone National Park Author Countries: United States Funding: This work was supported by the Utah Agricultural Experiment Station (Project ...

Air quality in schools: Shielding kids with intellectual and developmental disabilities from COVID

2024-04-03
During the pandemic, University of Rochester Medical Center (URMC) researchers, including those from the Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities Research Center (IDDRC), teamed up with the Mary Cariola Center to study ways to prevent COVID infection among children with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD), a particularly vulnerable population. Together, they found that good airflow and filtration in schools may help these children and their teachers avoid COVID infections. The COVID pandemic was a particularly difficult balancing act for children with IDDs and their ...

JAX researchers make mice a more powerful tool to study a wide range of human diseases

JAX researchers make mice a more powerful tool to study a wide range of human diseases
2024-04-03
In humans, the exact same mutation in a specific gene can produce widely different outcomes. It’s a bit like adding the same amount of salt to different recipes—the effect on the finished dish can be quite different, depending on the mix of other ingredients. Now, researchers at The Jackson Laboratory (JAX) have developed a powerful platform to study the reasons behind these varying mutation outcomes. The work, published today in Science Advances, not only provides new opportunities for uncovering targets for therapeutic interventions but also represents a significant step forward in addressing the critical need ...

Immunotherapy for Alzheimer’s disease shows promise in mouse study

2024-04-03
Alzheimer’s disease starts with a sticky protein called amyloid beta that builds up into plaques in the brain, setting off a chain of events that results in brain atrophy and cognitive decline. The new generation of Alzheimer’s drugs — the first proven to change the course of the disease — work by tagging amyloid for clearance by the brain’s immune cells. Now, researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have found a different and promising way to remove the noxious plaques: by directly mobilizing immune cells to consume ...

Study gives first view of centromere variation and evolution

2024-04-03
A genomic study of human and selected nonhuman primate centromeres has revealed their unimaginable diversity and speed of evolutionary change. In cell genetics, a centromere is the spot where two sister chromatids attach. A chromatid is one-half of a duplicated chromosome. United pairs of chromosomes have identifiable shapes because centromeres are not in a uniform position. As a cell prepares to divide, the machinery to separate and segregate chromosomes goes into action at each centromere location. Unless the genetic material ...

New tools reveal how genes work and cells organize

New tools reveal how genes work and cells organize
2024-04-03
Proteins binding to RNA are important in many processes in the cell and can mediate a range of biological functions. A specialized structure in both DNA and RNA, the G-quadruplex, are regulatory elements involved in gene expression in both DNA and RNA. In the present work the researchers use theoretical predictions and molecular biology experiments to show that many chromatin-binding proteins bind to RNA G-quadruplexes. With this information they can classify proteins based on their potential to bind RNA G-quadruplexes. The study uses a combination of experimental identification of RNA G-quadruplex-binding proteins and computational methods to build a prediction tool that identify the probability ...

New study shows LLMs respond differently based on user’s motivation

2024-04-03
A new study recently published in the Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association (JAMIA) reveals how large language models (LLMs) respond to different motivational states. In their evaluation of three LLM-based generative conversational agents (GAs)—ChatGPT, Google Bard, and Llama 2, PhD student Michelle Bak and Assistant Professor Jessie Chin of the School of Information Sciences at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign found that while GAs are able to identify users' ...

Top multiple sclerosis neurologists & scientists to headline CMSC Annual Meeting for healthcare professionals

Top multiple sclerosis neurologists & scientists to headline CMSC Annual Meeting for healthcare professionals
2024-04-03
The leading research and educational conference for multiple sclerosis healthcare professionals in North America, the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers (CMSC) 38th Annual Meeting, returns to Nashville, Tennessee, May 29-June 1, 2024 at the Music City Center. The conference is renowned for its emphasis on reaching the interprofessional team involved in MS care, with learning opportunities for physicians, advanced practice clinicians, nursing professionals, pharmacists, mental health and rehabilitation specialists, dietitians, researchers, advocates and other members of the healthcare team involved in the management of people with MS.             ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Structure of dopamine-releasing neurons relates to the type of circuits they form for smell-processing

Reducing social isolation protects the brain in later life   

Keeping the heart healthy increases longevity even after cancer

Young adults commonly mix cannabis with nicotine and tobacco

Comprehensive review illuminates tau protein's dual nature in brain health, disease, and emerging psychiatric connections

Book prepares K-12 leaders for the next public health crisis

Storms in the Southern Ocean mitigates global warming

Seals on the move: Research reveals key data for offshore development and international ecology

Sports injuries sustained during your period might be more severe

World's first successful 2 Tbit/s free-space optical communication using small optical terminals mountable on satellites and HAPS

Can intimate relationships affect your heart? New study says ‘yes’

Scalable and healable gradient textiles for multi‑scenario radiative cooling via bicomponent blow spinning

Research shows informed traders never let a good climate crisis go to waste

Intelligent XGBoost framework enhances asphalt pavement skid resistance assessment

Dual-function biomaterials for postoperative osteosarcoma: Tumor suppression and bone regeneration

New framework reveals where transport emissions concentrate in Singapore

NTP-enhanced lattice oxygen activation in Ce-Co catalysts for low-temperature soot combustion

Synergistic interface engineering in Cu-Zn-Ce catalysts for efficient CO2 hydrogenation to methanol

COVID-19 leaves a lasting mark on the human brain

Scientists use ultrasound to soften and treat cancer tumors without damaging healthy tissue

Community swimming program for Black youth boosts skills, sense of belonging, study finds

Specific depressive symptoms in midlife linked to increased dementia risk

An ‘illuminating’ design sheds light on cholesterol

Who is more likely to get long COVID?

Study showcases resilience and rapid growth of “living rocks”

Naval Research Lab diver earns Office of Naval Research 2025 Sailor of the Year

New Mayo-led study establishes practical definition for rapidly progressive dementia

Fossil fuel industry’s “climate false solutions” reinforce its power and aggravate environmental injustice 

Researchers reveal bias in a widely used measure of algorithm performance

Alcohol causes cancer. A study from IOCB Prague confirms damage to DNA and shows how cells defend against it

[Press-News.org] Early dinosaurs grew up fast, but they weren’t the only ones
High growth rates apparently a common feature among early Mesozoic animals