9-Foot 'Butcher Crocodile' Likely Ruled Before
Dinosaurs
A 9-foot-tall beast with bladelike
teeth once stalked the warm and wet environs of what is now North Carolina some
230 million years ago, before dinosaurs came onto the scene there, scientists
have found.
Now called Carnufex carolinensis,
the crocodile ancestor likely walked on its hind legs, preying on armored
reptiles and early mammal relatives in its ecosystem, the researchers say.
They named it Carnufex,
meaning "butcher" in Latin, because of its long skull, which
resembles a knife, and its bladelike teeth, which it likely used to slice flesh
off the bones of prey, said lead study author Lindsay Zanno, of NC State
University and the NC Museum of Natural Sciences. "'Butcher' seemed a very
appropriate way to get that into the minds of people," Zanno told Live
Science in an interview.
The large creature reveals not only
one of the earliest crocodylomorphs, a group that includes today's crocodiles
and their close relatives, but also highlights the diversity of top predators
of the time. "People don't think about how many different predators were
around in the Triassic, and that crocs really ruled before dinosaurs,"
Zanno said. [Photos: Ancient Crocodile Relatives Roamed the
Amazon]
Odd creature
Zanno and her colleagues discovered
parts of the skull, spine and arm bone of the creature while digging in the
Pekin Formation in Chatham County, North Carolina. Sediments there were
deposited 231 million years ago during what is called the late Triassic Period, when the area was still a part of the supercontinent Pangaea and was located near Earth's equator.
"Around the equator at that
time, we don't yet have dinosaurs showing up in this ecosystem," Zanno
said. That could be a sampling artifact or because scientists just haven't
found those dinosaur bones, "but as far as we know they weren't
there," she added. The absence of predatory dinosaurs may have allowed
meat eaters like Carnufex to balloon to its giant size.
As soon as they saw the bones of the
newfound creature in the rocks, the scientists knew it was something new. For
instance, they noticed this weird texture on the animal's bones. "It has
really pronounced ornamentation on the skull, it has all these pits and grooves,"
Zanno said, adding that the ornamentation is seen in crocs today but not in
their early ancestors.
Being one of the earliest and most
primitive crocodylomorphs, Carnufex shared characteristics with several
groups of organisms, including cheekbone features and tooth shape that resemble
those found in theropods, a group of meat-eating dinosaurs.
It also shared some skeletal
features with the big-headed dinosaurlike reptiles called rauisuchids, a sister
group of top predators on Pangaea at the time, Zanno said.
Little guys win out
Its reign as "top dog"
didn't last. The extinction at the end of the Triassic killed off a slew of
Earth's predators, including large crocodylomorphs and rauisuchids, leaving
unscathed small crocodylomorphs and theropods.
"Theropods were ready
understudies for vacant top predator niches when large-bodied crocs and their
relatives bowed out," Zanno said in a statement. "Predatory dinosaurs
went on to fill these roles exclusively for the next 135 million years."
Crocodile ancestors would have been
pushed into secondary predator roles, the researchers noted.
"As theropod dinosaurs started
to make it big, the ancestors of modern crocs initially took on a role similar
to foxes or jackals, with small, sleek bodies and long limbs," study
co-author Susan Drymala, graduate student at NC State, said in the statement.
"If you want to picture these animals, just think of a modern-day fox, but
with alligator skin instead of fur."
The researchers detailed the
discovery today (March 19) in the journal Scientific Reports.
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