In the next generation of
dinosaur-based blockbuster films, some of the star creatures could perhaps
sound more like a bird and a little less like a roaring lion.
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At least that is a possibility raised from
new research published in February, although very little is really understood
about dinosaur vocals.
But a research team has drawn clues about
sounds the extinct creatures could have made from what might be the first known
fossilized larynx of a dinosaur. It comes from an ankylosaur, a group of
armored plant-eaters that were not close relatives of birds. This squat, spiky
dinosaur (Pinacosaurus grangeri) was unearthed in 2005 in Mongolia.
“Assuming that dinosaurs make some crocodile-like sounds is pretty safe. That’s the base anatomy they’d be working with. And then birds evolved these additional ways of producing sounds where they can modify the sounds coming out of their throat in a more nuanced way.”
Junki Yoshida, a paleontologist at the
Fukushima Museum in Japan, said the find was surprising because the body parts
involved in vocalization, including the larynx, which is often made of
cartilage but can be bony in some animals, were not considered to be good
candidates for preservation as fossils. (The larynx in some animals is located
near the upper part of the windpipe and contains the vocal cords.)
Crocodile rumbles?To try to glean what sounds a dinosaur
might have uttered, Yoshida’s team also looked to the evolutionary relatives of
those Cretaceous creatures, including birds and the dinosaurs’ closest cousins
— crocodiles.
“They kind of bracket the range of sounds
we might expect,” said Victoria Arbour, a paleontologist at the Royal BC Museum
in Victoria, Canada, who was not involved in the new study.
Crocodiles’ vocal repertoire includes deep rumbles
and hisses. “Assuming that dinosaurs make some crocodile-like sounds is pretty
safe,” she said. “That’s the base anatomy they’d be working with. And then
birds evolved these additional ways of producing sounds where they can modify
the sounds coming out of their throat in a more nuanced way.”
Birdcalls?Birds and reptiles have different ways of
producing sounds using the organs that surround their windpipes and lungs. In
extinct and living crocodile relatives, the larynx produces sound. Birds possess
a different organ, called the syrinx, that sits close to their lungs to produce
sound. They also have another organ, located near their mouths, for changing up
those sounds, allowing some birds to create elaborate songs.
“There’s still possibilities that they made chirping and cooing” noises, Yoshida said. But it is too soon to understand what specific sounds dinosaurs might have made, he cautioned.
Yoshida and his colleagues sized up two
parts of the larynx, which would have supported muscles involved in opening the
airway and changing its shape. In the ankylosaur, the parts were both bones.
The team compared their proportions to the larynxes from dozens of birds and
reptiles, including crocodiles, geckos, and turtles.
One part that forms the base of the
ankylosaur’s larynx was very large compared to those of other animals, suggesting
that this dinosaur could open its airway wide to make loud calls that could be
heard far away, Yoshida said. The other larynx part, a relatively long pair of
bones, could have permitted the windpipe to change shape to modify sounds, he
added. That might have allowed ankylosaurs to vocalize in a way similar to
birds, the researchers reported recently in the journal Communications Biology.
People might assume that sounding birdlike
would mean these dinosaurs were tweeting like meadowlarks, Arbour said. That is
probably not true, but “they might have had a broader range of sounds than we
might give ankylosaurs credit for otherwise”, she said.
Could other dinosaurs have sounded like birds? Maybe. Clarke and her colleagues found a fossilized syrinx from around 67 million years ago in an ancient bird.
“There’s still possibilities that they made
chirping and cooing” noises, Yoshida said. But it is too soon to understand
what specific sounds dinosaurs might have made, he cautioned. Even a single
bird species makes a wide range of noises, and there are other organs at play,
from the mouth and nose to possibly a syrinx, he said.
‘Still a lot of questions’Julia Clarke, a paleontologist at the
University of Texas at Austin who was not part of the study, found the analysis
intriguing. But she said that the way these larynx parts and other nearby bones
were arranged in the ankylosaur did not resemble those in birds.
“Only in pterosaurs do we see something
like the birdlike condition,” she said.
It is not clear how the structures that the
team analyzed would allow an ankylosaur to vary sounds, Clarke said. Birds do
not use the larynx for this purpose. They have an organ she called a
hyolaryngeal basket that moves up or down to modify their calls. And the larynx
shows up in all tetrapods — a group that includes animals like birds, reptiles
and mammals that descended from four-limbed creatures. The anatomy described in
the research varies across animals whether they can vocalize or not. “We don’t
know what any of this variation means,” she said.
The larynx parts under study might have had
more to do with keeping food out of the airway because they helped to open and
close it, she said. And the layout of related structures in this ankylosaur
also looked completely different than those of many other dinosaurs, ones that
Clarke has studied and that show up in the literature.
Could other dinosaurs have sounded like
birds? Maybe. Clarke and her colleagues found a fossilized syrinx from around
67 million years ago in an ancient bird. Since that was before dinosaurs went
extinct, that raises the possibility that some dinosaurs may have had them. But
so far, no one has found a fossilized syrinx in a non-avian dinosaur.
These larynx parts in the new study
probably had to do with the unique attributes of this ankylosaur rather than
something that could be generalized across dinosaurs, she said. “There are
still a lot of questions about the evolution of dinosaur vocalization.”
“Ankylosaurs are weird,” Clarke said. “That
is the main message.”
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