Utah Museum of Natural History and Department of Geology and Geophysics, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA.
PLoS One. 2010 Sep 22;5(9):e12292. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0012292.
During much of the Late Cretaceous, a shallow, epeiric sea divided North America into eastern and western landmasses. The western landmass, known as Laramidia, although diminutive in size, witnessed a major evolutionary radiation of dinosaurs. Other than hadrosaurs (duck-billed dinosaurs), the most common dinosaurs were ceratopsids (large-bodied horned dinosaurs), currently known only from Laramidia and Asia. Remarkably, previous studies have postulated the occurrence of latitudinally arrayed dinosaur "provinces," or "biomes," on Laramidia. Yet this hypothesis has been challenged on multiple fronts and has remained poorly tested.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Here we describe two new, co-occurring ceratopsids from the Upper Cretaceous Kaiparowits Formation of Utah that provide the strongest support to date for the dinosaur provincialism hypothesis. Both pertain to the clade of ceratopsids known as Chasmosaurinae, dramatically increasing representation of this group from the southern portion of the Western Interior Basin of North America. Utahceratops gettyi gen. et sp. nov.-characterized by short, rounded, laterally projecting supraorbital horncores and an elongate frill with a deep median embayment-is recovered as the sister taxon to Pentaceratops sternbergii from the late Campanian of New Mexico. Kosmoceratops richardsoni gen. et sp. nov.-characterized by elongate, laterally projecting supraorbital horncores and a short, broad frill adorned with ten well developed hooks-has the most ornate skull of any known dinosaur and is closely allied to Chasmosaurus irvinensis from the late Campanian of Alberta.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Considered in unison, the phylogenetic, stratigraphic, and biogeographic evidence documents distinct, co-occurring chasmosaurine taxa north and south on the diminutive landmass of Laramidia. The famous Triceratops and all other, more nested chasmosaurines are postulated as descendants of forms previously restricted to the southern portion of Laramidia. Results further suggest the presence of latitudinally arrayed evolutionary centers of endemism within chasmosaurine ceratopsids during the late Campanian, the first documented occurrence of intracontinental endemism within dinosaurs.
在白垩纪晚期的大部分时间里,一个浅的、陆表海将北美洲分为东西两个大陆。这个西部大陆被称为拉拉米迪亚,虽然面积不大,但见证了恐龙的主要进化辐射。除了鸭嘴龙(鸭嘴恐龙)之外,最常见的恐龙是角龙类(大型角恐龙),目前仅在拉拉米迪亚和亚洲发现。值得注意的是,以前的研究假设在拉拉米迪亚存在沿纬度排列的恐龙“省份”或“生物区系”。然而,这个假设在多个方面受到了挑战,而且仍然没有得到很好的检验。
方法/主要发现:在这里,我们描述了来自犹他州上白垩统凯帕罗维茨组的两种新的角龙类,它们为恐龙省域假说提供了迄今为止最强有力的支持。这两种角龙类都属于角龙类中的角龙亚科,极大地增加了北美西部内陆盆地南部角龙类的代表性。犹他角龙新种(gen. et sp. nov.)——其特征是短而圆、侧向突出的眶上角核和一个长而深的颈盾,具有深的中央凹陷——被恢复为来自新墨西哥州晚坎潘期的五角龙的姊妹分类群。科斯莫角龙新种(gen. et sp. nov.)——其特征是长而侧向突出的眶上角核和一个短而宽的颈盾,上面装饰着十个发育良好的钩子——是已知恐龙中最华丽的头骨,与来自阿尔伯塔省晚坎潘期的角鼻龙密切相关。
结论/意义:综合考虑,系统发育、地层和生物地理学的证据记录了在拉拉米迪亚这个小陆地上北部和南部存在独特的、共同存在的角龙类分类群。著名的三角龙和所有其他更嵌套的角龙类被假定为以前仅限于拉拉米迪亚南部的形式的后代。研究结果进一步表明,在晚坎潘期,角龙类角龙类中存在沿纬度排列的特有性进化中心,这是恐龙中首次记录到大陆内特有性。