Department of Biological Sciences, Clemson University, Clemson, South Carolina, USA.
R. C. Edwards Middle School, Central, South Carolina, USA.
Anat Rec (Hoboken). 2023 Jul;306(7):1618-1630. doi: 10.1002/ar.25003. Epub 2022 Jun 7.
Distinctive anatomical features of bones can influence not only how these structures perform in living animals but also the tendency of elements to be transported by flowing water after death. Such transport can be critical in the concentration of fossils from animals that live near freshwater habitats, providing important context for interpreting the composition of paleocommunities. Measurements of the tendency of flowing water to disperse skeletal elements have been collected for diverse taxa, including mammals, turtles, and birds. However, these extant models may not be entirely appropriate for many morphologically distinct extinct lineages, such as non-avian dinosaurs. To expand the range of models available for evaluating the influence of hydrodynamic transport on the assembly of fossil deposits, we used a flow tank to measure the water speeds that disperse bones from a subadult American alligator (Alligator mississippiensis), with the skull and mandible tested in multiple starting orientations. Alligator bones are sorted into three main dispersal groups: early (vertebrae, most girdle elements), intermediate (ribs, most limb bones), and late (pubis, femur), with the skull and mandible varying between intermediate and late depending on orientation. Late dispersing elements tended to be heavy or very flat. These results can refine interpretations of the taphonomic context for deposits of fossil crocodylians and morphologically similar taxa (e.g., choristoderes, phytosaurs) and provide an additional comparative model for deposits of non-avian dinosaurs. Moreover, variation in hydrodynamic sorting across lineages highlights how distinctive anatomical features can influence the concentration of fossils, shaping understanding of assemblage composition and paleofaunal evolution.
骨骼的独特解剖特征不仅影响这些结构在活体动物中的功能,还影响死后元素被流水搬运的趋势。这种搬运对于生活在淡水生境附近的动物的化石的集中具有重要意义,为解释古群落的组成提供了重要背景。已经为包括哺乳动物、海龟和鸟类在内的多种分类群收集了流水分散骨骼元素的倾向的测量值。然而,这些现存的模型对于许多形态上不同的灭绝谱系可能并不完全合适,例如非鸟类恐龙。为了扩大可用于评估水动力搬运对化石沉积物组合影响的模型范围,我们使用流槽来测量从亚成体美洲鳄(Alligator mississippiensis)分散骨骼的水流速度,头骨和下颌骨以多种起始方向进行测试。鳄鱼骨骼分为三个主要的分散组:早期(脊椎骨、大多数腰带元素)、中期(肋骨、大多数四肢骨骼)和晚期(耻骨、股骨),头骨和下颌骨根据方向在中期和晚期之间变化。晚期分散的元素往往较重或非常扁平。这些结果可以细化对化石鳄类和形态相似的分类群(例如,喙头蜥类、植龙类)沉积的埋藏学背景的解释,并为非鸟类恐龙的沉积提供了另一个比较模型。此外,谱系间水动力分选的变化突出了独特的解剖特征如何影响化石的集中程度,从而塑造了对组合组成和古动物群进化的理解。