Friday, March 25, 2022

[Paleontology • 2022] First Titanosaur Dinosaur Nesting Site from the Late Cretaceous of Brazil



in Fiorelli, Martinelli, da Silva, ... et da Silva Marinho, 2022.  

Artwork: Júlia d'Oliveira   twitter.com/tupandactylus 

Abstract
Titanosaurs were successful herbivorous dinosaurs widely distributed in all continents during the Cretaceous, with the major diversity in South America. The success of titanosaurs was probably due to several physiological and ecological factors, in addition to a series of morphological traits they achieved during their evolutionary history. However, the generalist nesting behaviour using different palaeoenvironments and strategies was key to accomplish that success. Titanosaur nesting sites have been found extensively around the world, with notable records in Spain, France, Romania, India, and, especially, Argentina. Here, we describe the first titanosaur nesting site from the Late Cretaceous of Brazil that represents the most boreal nesting site for South America. Several egg-clutches, partially preserved, isolated eggs and many eggshell fragments were discovered in an Inceptisol palaeosol profile of the mining Lafarge Quarry, at the Ponte Alta District (Uberaba Municipality, Minas Gerais State), corresponding to the Serra da Galga Formation (Bauru Group, Bauru Basin). Although classical mechanical preparation and CT scans have not revealed embryonic remains in ovo, the eggs and eggshell features match those eggs containing titanosaurian embryos found worldwide. The morphology of the egg-clutches and observations of the sedimentary characteristics bolster the hypothesis that these sauropods were burrow-nester dinosaurs, as was already suggested for the group based on other nesting sites. The egg-clutches distributed in two levels along the Lafarge outcrops, together with the geopalaeontological data collected, provide clear evidence for the first colonial nesting and breeding area of titanosaur dinosaurs in Brazil.

Selected titanosaurian eggs and egg-clutches collected from the Late Cretaceous Serra da Galga Formation (Bauru Group) at Ponto Alta nesting site, Uberaba Municipality, Minas Gerais State, Brazil. (a) CPPLIP 1798, best-preserved recovered egg-clutch, bottom view. (b) CPPLIP 1801, isolated egg, with accompanying tomographic slice, showing thickness of the shell and its sedimentary fill. (c) CPPLIP 1799, egg-clutch with accompanying tomographic slice, showing thickness of the shell, shells collapsed and its sedimentary fill. (d,e) CPPLIP 1800, two eggs found associated. (f) CPPLIP 1804 isolated partial egg. Scale bars 5 cm.


Model of events of titanosaur egg laying in two levels (L1 and L2), preservation, and subsequent sedimentation in the Ponte Alta nesting site. (a) First level of eggs. (b) Repeated selection of the laying area (by philopatry or breeding-site fidelity), excavation, and laying the eggs. (c) Covered eggs and a new deposition.

Systematic palaeontology
DINOSAURIA Owen, 1842
SAUROPODA Marsh, 1878

TITANOSAURIA Bonaparte & Coria, 1993

Titanosauria indet.

Conclusions
We report the first dinosaur nesting area for the Cretaceous of Brazil, corresponding to several eggs and egg-clusters discovered in the Serra da Galga Formation (Bauru Group) at the abandoned mining Lafarge Quarry, in Ponte Alta region, Uberaba Municipality, Minas Gerais State. This titanosaur nesting site also represents the most boreal one for South America, with a palaeolatitude similar to the one found in India. Fossil preparation and CT scans of these egg-clutches have so far not revealed any embryonic remains in ovo. However, the egg-clutch features and the macro- and micromorphology of the eggs and their eggshells match those titanosaur eggs found worldwide which bolster the hypothesis of Late Cretaceous derived titanosaurs nesting in large colonial breeding areas also in Brazil. Based on the depositional horizon and the macro- and micromorphology of the eggs, the titanosaurs from Ponte Alta must have adopted a burial nesting strategy and the eggs were incubated in specific conditions under environmental source heat. These would have been commonly chosen nesting conditions by lithostrotian titanosaurs. During Cretaceous times, titanosaurs lived on every continent, even Antarctica. The worldwide evolutionary success of titanosaurs was due, among other things, to their great, quasi-general, adaptive behaviour to nest in colonial nesting areas and in several environments. However, the direct dependence of its nesting behaviour to specific environments (e.g., arid palaeosols, hydrothermal environment, etc.) could have played a key role as an extinction factor at the end of the Cretaceous.




Lucas E. Fiorelli, Agustín G. Martinelli, João Ismael da Silva, E. Martín Hechenleitner, Marcus Vinícius Theodoro Soares, Julian C. G. Silva Junior, José Carlos da Silva, Élbia Messias Roteli Borges, Luiz Carlos Borges Ribeiro, André Marconato, Giorgio Basilici and Thiago da Silva Marinho. 2022.  First Titanosaur Dinosaur Nesting Site from the Late Cretaceous of Brazil. Scientific Reports. 12, 5091. DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-09125-9