Published online: 23 May 2007; | doi:10.1038/news070521-6 / http://www.nature.com/news/2007/070521/full/070521-6.html
Bald dino casts doubt on feather theory
Fossil calls into question the purpose of the first feathers.Katharine Sanderson


| Sinosauropteryx may not have been a feathery dinosaur after all. Proc. R. Soc. Lond. B |
|
Feathery
dinosaurs might not have been as common as experts thought, according
to researchers who analysed a fossil of a creature previously thought
to have feathers, and found instead that it was bald.
The
discovery calls into question the theory that the first feathers
evolved not for flight but for insulation, and that they made their
first appearance in relatively early dinosaur lineages that later
evolved into modern birds. If these dinosaurs didn't have feathers, or
feather-like structures, then feathers may have evolved at a later
time, and been used for flight right from the start.
The fossil represents a dinosaur called
Sinosauropteryx,
which lived in the Early Cretaceous period roughly 140 million years
ago. The specimen, found in Liaoning Province, China, has distinctive
patterns seen in its skin. Previous studies of other related dinosaurs
with similar markings have led experts to conclude that these dinosaurs
were covered with downy 'protofeathers'.
But
Theagarten Lingham-Soliar from the University of KwaZulu-Natal in
Durban, South Africa, and his colleagues now say otherwise. Instead,
they argue that these structures are degraded remains of collagen
fibres, the main connective tissue in animals.
Decomposing theoryLingham-Soliar
and his colleagues produced high-resolution microscopic images of the
fossil that, he says, show that these structures represent degraded
soft tissue. The regular pattern of the fibres suggests that
Sinosauropteryx
had a frill of skin along its neck, back and tail. And the random
orientation of some of the fibres, previously attributed to
protofeathers, are more likely to indicate breakages in the regular
pattern of collagen fibres as the dinosaur decomposed.
The
researchers also say that the absence of herringbone-shaped patterns -
which would be seen if feathers were present - puts another nail in the
coffin for the protofeather suggestion. They publish their findings in
Proceedings of the Royal Society B1.
If
Sinosauropteryx was indeed featherless, then it may be that feathers arrived on the evolutionary scene later than palaeontologists had thought.
But the discovery does not mean that
Sinosauropteryx
and its kin were not the forefathers of birds. "There's no need to
panic," says David Unwin, a dinosaur expert at the University of
Leicester, UK. "This doesn't in any way challenge the idea that
dinosaurs had feathers and that dinosaurs gave rise to birds." The real
argument now is when in evolutionary history feathers started to
emerge. "Things may be more complex than we thought," he says.
And even if
Sinosauropteryx was featherless, it
is still possible to argue that feathers evolved for something other
than flight. "There are many other dinosaurs between the microraptor [a
bird-like dinosaur thought to glide, but not fly] and
Sinosauropteryx
with feathers that are not ostensibly flight feathers," says Unwin.
This result simply throws into doubt the first step in feather
evolution.
Unwin
is happy to believe that this single specimen is probably featherless
and has a fibrous structure, although he suggests this doesn't have to
be collagen but could also be muscle fibre or elastin. Unwin wants to
see an analysis of a much greater number of specimens, using a wider
range of analytical techniques, before he is convinced either way about
Sinosauropteryx and its feathers, or lack of them. "It's almost dangerous to only look at one or two specimens," he says.
References- Lingham-Soliar T., et al. Proc. R. Soc. Lond. B, doi:10.1098/rspb.2007.0352 (2007).
Un dinosaure chauve étonne les chercheurs
Par Jean-Luc Goudet - Futura-Sciences
Figurant
parmi les ancêtres des oiseaux, ce dinosaure n'avait pas de plumes.
Est-ce si surprenant ? Oui ! Car les paléontologues qui le paraient
d'un joli plumage doivent revoir maintenant leur copie sur l'histoire
de la plume...
http://www.futura-sciences.com/fr/sinformer/actualites/news/t/paleontologie/d/un-dinosaure-chauve-etonne-les-chercheurs_11920/