Thursday, March 30, 2017

Introducing Daspletosaurus horneri, The Two Medicine Tyrannosaurine: Phylogeny


The Two Medicine tyrannosaurine made its first appearance in Horner et al.’s brief, yet landmark 1992 paper in Nature entitled “Marine transgressions and the evolution of Cretaceous dinosaurs”. Its skull was illustrated as an enigmatic silhouette, identified as a “metaspecies”, situated compellingly in a phylogenetic arrangement (not a true cladogram), between silhouettes of Daspletosaurus torosus and Tyrannosaurus rex. I have redrawn their figure here:


Visually, Horner et al. showed that the unnamed Two Medicine tyrannosaurine was a transitional species between the earlier D. torosus and the later T. rex. In support of this hypothesis, they listed several features shared between the Two Medicine tyrannosaurine and T. rex, showing that the unnamed species was the intermediate step from D. torosus to T. rex, hence the arrowhead in the diagram. The transitional position and morphology of the "metaspecies" was provided as evidence of the speciation mode called anagenesis, that is, speciation without branching where one taxon morphs into another over geological time. In contrast, the more common mode of speciation is called cladogenesis, where an ancestral species splits into two descendant species:


Since 1992, the unnamed taxon has appeared in several phylogenetic analyses, identified only as the “Two Medicine tyrannosaurine”. Here is a selection of the phylogenies, including Horner et al. (1992):


 Today, Thursday, March 30, 2017, my research team and I re-introduce the Two Medicine tyrannosaurine as Daspletosaurus horneri – “Horner’s frightful lizard,” 25 years after it first appeared on the scene. The article is freely available here: http://www.nature.com/articles/srep44942

Our phylogenetic results recover D. horneri as the sister species of D. torosus, but T. rex was recovered deep in a branch of Asian tyrannosaurines (Zuchengtyrannus magnus, T. bataar) and so it was not the zenith of the Daspletosaurus lineage. Regardless, we agree with Horner et al. (1992) that the hypothesis of anagenesis is defensible (to be elaborated in an forthcoming post):


Our cladistic analysis recovered many characters in support of the Daspletosaurus clade, which was the basis of our referral to the genus:


More to come later...

References Cited

Brusatte, S. L. et al. Tyrannosaur paleobiology: new research on ancient exemplar organisms. Science 329, 1481-1485 (2010).

Brusatte, S. L. & Carr, T. D. The phylogeny and evolutionary history of tyrannosauroid dinosaurs. Sci. Reports 6, 20252, doi: 10.1038/srep20252 (2016).

Carr, T. D., Williamson, T. E., & Schwimmer, D. R. A new genus and species of tyrannosauroid from the Late Cretaceous (Middle Campanian) Demopolis Formation of Alabama. J. Vert. Paleontol. 25, 119-143 (2005).

Carr, T. D. & Williamson, T. E. Bistahieversor sealeyi, gen. et sp. nov., a new tyrannosauroid from New Mexico and the origin of deep snouts in Tyrannosauroidea. J. Vert. Paleontol. 30, 1-16 (2010).

Carr, T. D., Williamson, T. E., Britt, B. B. & Stadtman, K.  Evidence for high taxonomic diversity and morphologic tyrannosauroid diversity in the Late Cretaceous (Late Campanian) of the American Southwest and a new short-skulled tyrannosaurid from the Kaiparowits Formation of Utah. Naturwissen. 98(3), 241, doi: 10.1007/s00114-011-0762-7(2011).

Carr, T. D., Varricchio, D. J., Sedlmayr, J. C., Roberts, E. M., & Moore, J. R. A new tyrannosaur with evidence for anagenesis and crocodile-like facial sensory system. Sci. Reports. doi: 10.1038/srep44842 (2017).


Holtz, T. R. In Mesozoic Vertebrate Life (eds Carpenter, K. & Tanke, D.) 64-83 (Indiana Univ. Press, 
2001).

Horner, J. R., Varricchio, D. J. & Goodwin, M. B. Marine transgressions and the evolution of Cretaceous dinosaurs. Nature 358, 59-61(1992). 

Loewen, M. A., Irmis, R. B., Sertich, J. J. W., Currie, P. J. & Sampson, S. D. Tyrant dinosaur evolution tracks the rise and fall of Late Cretaceous oceans. PLoS ONE 8(11), e79420, doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0079420 (2013).

3 comments:

  1. Been waiting for this to be published for a long time...Very good paper, but I just wanted to ask what is going on with that very complete juvenile tyrannosaurid from a Two Medice fm. that is haused at MOR? Isn't that a juvenile of this new species?

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  2. Fran: That specimen is in the Blackfeet Heritage Center & Art Gallery, which, as far as we could tell, is not accredited by the American Alliance of Museums. The AAM is the museum accreditation body in the US; if a specimen - no matter how important - was in the collection of a nonaccredited museum, then we did not include it in our study. Had we included that skeleton, then we would be in violation of the ethics guidelines of the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology.

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  3. Oh, I thought it was at MOR for some reason. Now it makes sense. Thanks!

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