Research Paper

Did large foraging migrations favor the enormous body size of giant sauropods? The case of Turiasaurus


JORDI AGUSTÍ

ICREA. Institut Català de Paleoecologia humana i Evolució social (IPHES), Universitat Rovira i Virgili. C/ Marcel·li Domingo, s/n (Edifici W3), Campus Sescelades, E-43007 Tarragona, Spain; jordi.agusti@icrea.cat.

Corresponding author

LUIS ALCALÁ

Parque de las Ciencias de Andalucía-Granada, Avda. de la Ciencia, s/n, E-18006 Granada, Spain; alcala@parqueciencias.com.

ANDRÉS SANTOS-CUBEDO

rea de Cristal·lografia i Mineralogia. Departament de Biologia, Bioquimica i Ciències Naturals. Universitat Jaume I, Avda. de Vicent Sos Baynat s/n, E-12071 Castelló de la Plana, Spain; santos.cubedo@gmail.com.


ABSTRACT

We propose that the huge sizes attained by many sauropod dinosaurs can be explained in the context of a climate characterized by pronounced seasonal changes. Under these conditions, the large herbivores would have become migratory, forced to move great distances during the drier times of year, in which case large body size becomes an adaptive advantage, since large home ranges and the ability to travel great distances increase with size. In this way, the need for a large foraging radius is a potent source of selection for larger size, and the capacity for sauropods to migrate and explore new territory was significantly higher than in extant herbivores. Examples discussed are Turiasaurus riodevensis and Camarasaurus lentus; some of their anatomical structures, such as vertebral neural extensions and crests associated with nasal cavities, can also be explained under this scenario, as adaptations to drought conditions..

Key words: Sauropod, Turiasaurus, Camarasaurus, Gigantism, Jurassic, Cretaceous.

How to cite: Agustí, J., Alcalá, L., & Santos-Cubedo, A. (2024). Did large foraging migrations favor the enormous body size of giant sauropods? The case of Turiasaurus. Spanish Journal of Palaeontology, 39(1), 103-110.

Received 31 October 2023, Accepted 18 January 2024, Published online 31 January 2024

https://doi.org/10.7203/sjp.28176