Department of Environmental Science and Sustainability, Harrisburg University, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, USA.
Don Sundquist Center of Excellence in Paleontology, Johnson City, Tennessee, USA.
Anat Rec (Hoboken). 2023 Jul;306(7):1712-1756. doi: 10.1002/ar.25103. Epub 2022 Nov 7.
Dromaeosaurids (Theropoda: Dromaeosauridae), a group of dynamic, swift predators, have a sparse fossil record, particularly at the end of the Cretaceous Period. The recently described Dineobellator notohesperus, consisting of a partial skeleton from the Upper Cretaceous (Maastrichtian) of New Mexico, is the only diagnostic dromaeosaurid to be recovered from the latest Cretaceous of the southwestern United States. Reinterpreted and newly described material include several caudal vertebrae, portions of the right radius and pubis, and an additional ungual, tentatively inferred to be from manual digit III. Unique features, particularly those of the humerus, unguals, and caudal vertebrae, distinguish D. notohesperus from other known dromaeosaurids. This material indicates different physical attributes among dromaeosaurids, such as use of the forearms, strength in the hands and feet, and mobility of the tail. Several bones in the holotype exhibit abnormal growth and are inferred to be pathologic features resulting from an injury or disease. Similar lengths of the humerus imply Dineobellator and Deinonychus were of similar size, at least regarding length and/or height, although the more gracile nature of the humerus implies Dineobellator was a more lightly built predator. A new phylogenetic analysis recovers D. notohesperus as a dromaeosaurid outside other previously known and named clades. Theropod composition of the Naashoibito Member theropod fauna is like those found in the more northern Late Cretaceous North American ecosystems. Differences in tooth morphologies among recovered theropod teeth from the Naashoibito Member also implies D. notohesperus was not the only dromaeosaurid present in its environment.
恐爪龙类(兽脚亚目:恐爪龙科)是一群活跃、迅猛的捕食者,其化石记录相对较少,尤其是在白垩纪末期。最近描述的来自新墨西哥州晚白垩世(马斯特里赫特期)的部分骨骼的奔山龙(Dineobellator notohesperus)是唯一一种从美国西南部最晚白垩世被回收的具有诊断意义的恐爪龙类。重新解释和新描述的材料包括几个尾椎骨、右桡骨和耻骨的部分,以及一个额外的爪,初步推断来自手的第三指。独特的特征,特别是肱骨、爪和尾椎骨的特征,将 D. notohesperus 与其他已知的恐爪龙类区分开来。这些材料表明恐爪龙类之间具有不同的身体属性,例如前臂的使用、手脚的力量和尾巴的灵活性。正型标本中的几块骨头显示出异常的生长,推断为受伤或疾病导致的病理特征。肱骨的相似长度表明奔山龙和恐爪龙的大小相似,至少在长度和/或高度方面相似,尽管肱骨更纤细的性质表明奔山龙是一种更轻巧的捕食者。新的系统发育分析将 D. notohesperus 恢复为一种不在其他先前已知和命名的进化枝之外的恐爪龙类。那失比托阶兽脚类动物群的兽脚类组成与在更北部的晚白垩世北美生态系统中发现的相似。从那失比托阶回收的兽脚类牙齿的牙齿形态差异也表明,奔山龙并不是其环境中唯一存在的恐爪龙类。