Magnirostris dodsoni
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''Bagaceratops'' (meaning "small-horned face") is a genus of small protoceratopsid dinosaurs that lived in Asia during the Late Cretaceous, around 72 to 71 million years ago. ''Bagaceratops'' remains have been reported from the Barun Goyot Formation and Bayan Mandahu Formation. One specimen may argue the possible presence of ''Bagaceratops'' in the Djadochta Formation. ''Bagaceratops'' was among the smallest ceratopsians, growing up to in length, with a weight about . Although emerging late in the reign of the dinosaurs, ''Bagaceratops'' had a fairly primitive anatomy—when compared to the much derived ceratopsids—and kept the small body size that characterized early ceratopsians. Unlike its close relative, ''Protoceratops'', ''Bagaceratops'' lacked premaxillary teeth (cylindrical, blunt teeth near the tip of the upper jaw).


History of discovery

During the large field work of the Polish-Mongolian Palaeontological Expeditions in the 1970s, abundant protoceratopsid specimens were discovered on eroded surfaces of the Hermiin Tsav locality of the Barun Goyot Formation, Gobi Desert. This newly collected and rich fossil material is stored in the Museum of Evolution of Polish Academy of Sciences, Institute of Paleobiology of the Polish Academy of Sciences (Poland). In 1975, two of the expedition's leading scientists, namely Polish paleontologists Teresa Maryańska and Halszka Osmólska, published a large monograph dedicated to describe this material where they named the new genus and type species of protoceratopsid ''Bagaceratops rozhdestvenskyi''. The selected holotype is ZPAL MgD-I/126, which consists of a relatively medium-sized skull, and a vast majority of the specimens collected by the expeditions were assigned to ''Bagaceratops'', including juvenile and sub-adult skulls. The generic name, ''Bagaceratops'', means "small-horned face" and is derived from the Mongolian language, Mongolian ''baga'' = meaning small; and Ancient Greek, Greek ''ceratops'' = meaning horn face. The specific name, ''B. rozhdestvenskyi'', is named in honor of the Russian paleontologist Anatoly Konstantinovich Rozhdestvensky for his notorious work on dinosaurs.


Additional specimens

In 1993, the Japan-Mongolia Joint Paleontological Expedition collected an articulated and nearly complete ''Bagaceratops'' skeleton (MPC-D 100/535) from the Barun Goyot Formation at the Hermiin Tsav locality. In 2010 and 2011 this specimen was examined to analyze several borings (tunnel-like holes) left by invertebrae scavengers on joint areas. As of 2019, MPC-D 100/535 remains largely undescribed. In 2019 a partial skeleton (specimen KID 196) of ''Bagaceratops'' was described by Bitnara Kim and colleagues, who noted no significant diifferences between the skeleton of ''Protoceratops'' and the former. This specimen was discovered in 2007 also from the Hermiin Tsav locality of the Barun Goyot Formation, and includes a partially preserved skull with partial skeleton of an adult individual. In 2020, Czepiński described new specimens of ''Bagaceratops'' and ''Protoceratops'' from the Udyn Sayr and Zamyn Khond localities, respectively, of the Djadochta Formation, and evaluated the implications of these specimens for correlation of fossil sites of the latter formation. He considered one of these specimens in particular, MPC-D 100/551B, as a potential evidence of an anagenetic transition from ''Protoceratops andrewsi'' to ''Bagaceratops rozhdestvenskyi''.


Synonyms

Juvenile remains, at first tentatively named ''Protoceratops kozlowskii'', and then renamed ''Breviceratops kozlowskii'' by Kurzanov in 1990, were considered to be juvenile ''Bagaceratops''. Paul Sereno in 2000 explained this by extrapolating that the juvenile ''Breviceratops'' would grow into a mature ''Bagaceratops''. In 2003 Russian paleontologist Vladimir R. Alifanov named the new taxa ''Lamaceratops tereschenkoi'' and ''Platyceratops tatarinovi'' from the Barun Goyot Formation. Material assigned by Alifanov corresponds to the holotype of ''Lamaceratops'' (PIN 4487/26; a partial small-sized skull), recovered from the Khulsan locality, and the holotype of ''Platyceratops'' (PIN 3142/4; an almost complete medium-sized skull), found in the red beds of the Hermiin Tsav locality. He also coined the family Bagaceratopidae in order to contain these new taxa and ''Bagaceratops''. Also during 2003, You Hailu and Dong Zhiming described and named the new genus and species of protoceratopsid ''Magnirostris dodsoni'' from red beds at the Bayan Mandahu locality of the Bayan Mandahu Formation, Inner Mongolia (China). The holotype of ''Magnirostris'', IVPP V12513, represents a nearly complete skull lacking the Neck frill, frill region of a large individual and was collected during expeditions lead by the Sino-Canadian Dinosaur Project. In 2006 Mackoviky regarded all of these ceratopsians as junior synonyms of ''Bagaceratops'' based on the reasoning that all exhibit anatomical traits already seen on other specimens of this protoceratopsid, and some of them are likely products of preservation. In 2008 Alifanov described and named another ceratopsian taxon from the Barun Goyot Formation, ''Gobiceratops minitus''. Its holotype (PIN 3142/299) is represented by a very small and juvenile skull that was collected from the Hermiin Tsav locality near the end of the 1970s by the Joint Soviet–Mongolian Paleontological Expedition. Though Alifanov used this skull to erect the new ''Gobiceratops'', it had already been displayed for several years at the Moscow Paleontological Museum under the name ''Bagaceratops rozhdestvenskyi''. A comprehensive study on the intraspecific variation in morphology of ''B. rozhdestvenskyi'' was conducted by Polish paleontologist Łukasz Czepiński in 2019 in archosaur paleontology, 2019, where he concluded that the previously named ''Gobiceratops minutus'', ''Lamaceratops tereschenkoi'', ''Platyceratops tatarinovi'' and ''Magnirostris dodsoni'' represent additional specimens and growth stages of ''B. rozhdestvenskyi'' and therefore, junior synonyms. Czepiński rexamined many of the specimens originally described by Maryańska and Osmólska, as well as the respective holotypes of these taxa, providing evidence that all traits used to separate them are, in fact, indistinguishably present on ''Bagaceratops'' and they fall within the large intraspecific variation of this taxon. He also considered ''Breviceratops'' to be a distinct and separate genus of protoceratopsid, from both ''Bagaceratops'' and ''Protoceratops'', as it features a combination of basal (primitive) and derived (advanced) traits.


Description

''Bagaceratops'' was a small-sized protoceratopsid, reaching adult dimensions of about in length and in body mass based on ''Maginostris''. It had a smaller frill, about ten grinding teeth per jaw, and more triangular skull than its close relative, ''Protoceratops''. Although both ''Bagaceratops'' and ''Protoceratops'' were very similar (mostly in the postcranial skeleton), the former had a much derived (advanced) skull morphology. ''Bagaceratops'' lacked primitive premaxillary teeth, had paired (fused) nasal bones, and an oval-shaped fenestra (hole) was developed in the maxilla—otherwise known as accessory antorbital fenestra.


Classification

''Bagaceratops'' belonged to Ceratopsia, a group of herbivorous dinosaurs with parrot-like beaks which thrived in North America and Asia during the Cretaceous Period, which ended roughly 66 million years ago. In 2019 Czepiński analyzed a vast majority of referred specimens to the ceratopsians ''Bagaceratops'' and ''Breviceratops'', and concluded that most were in fact specimens of the former. Although the genera ''Gobiceratops'', ''Lamaceratops'', ''Magnirostris'', and ''Platyceratops'', were long considered valid and distinct taxa, and sometimes placed within Protoceratopsidae, Czepiński found the diagnostic features used to distinguish these taxa to be largely present in ''Bagaceratops'' and thus becoming synonyms of this genus. Under this reasoning, Protoceratopsidae consists of ''Bagaceratops'', ''Breviceratops'', and ''Protoceratops''. Based on cranial characters such as presence or absence of premaxillary teeth and an antorbital fenestra, ''P. andrewsi'' is the basal-most protoceratopsid and ''Bagaceratops'' the derived-most one. Below are the proposed phylogenetic relationships within Protoceratopsidae by Czepiński:


Paleoenvironment


Barun Goyot Formation

The Barun Goyot Formation, based on sediments, is regarded as Late Cretaceous in age (Middle-Upper Campanian) and has virtually yielded the bulk of material for which ''Bagaceratops'' is known. This formation is mostly characterized by series of red beds, mostly light-coloured sands (yellowish, grey-brown, and rarely reddish) that are locally cemented. Sandy claystones (often red-coloured), siltstones, Conglomerate (geology), conglomerates, and large-scale trough cross-stratification in sands are also common across the unit. In addition, structureless, medium-grained, fine-grained and very fine-grained sandstones predominate in sediments of the Barun Goyot Formation. The sediments of this formation were deposited in alluvial plain (flat land consisting of sediments deposited by highland rivers), lacustrine, and Aeolian processes, aeolian paleoenvironments, under relatively Desert climate, arid to semiarid climates. ''Bagaceratops'' is the most common taxon across the Barun Goyot Formation, which was also home to many other vertebrates, including the ankylosaurids ''Saichania'', ''Tarchia'' and ''Zaraapelta''; alvarezsaurids ''Khulsanurus'' and ''Parvicursor''; birds ''Gobipipus'', ''Gobipteryx'' and ''Hollanda''; fellow protoceratopsid ''Breviceratops''; dromaeosaurids ''Kuru kulla, Kuru'' and ''Shri devi, Shri''; halszkaraptorine ''Hulsanpes''; pachycephalosaurid ''Tylocephale''; and oviraptorids ''Conchoraptor'', ''Heyuannia'' and ''Nemegtomaia''. Other taxa are represented by the Megafauna, large titanosaur ''Quaesitosaurus'', and a wide diversity of mammals and squamates.


Bayan Mandahu Formation

The Bayan Mandahu Formation, which yielded ''Magnirostris'' (now synonym of ''Bagaceratops''), is considered to be Late Cretaceous in age, roughly Campanian. The dominant lithology is reddish-brown, poorly cemented, fine grained sandstone with some conglomerate, and caliche. Other facies include alluvial (stream-deposited) and aeolian (wind-deposited) sediments. It is likely that sediments at Bayan Mandahu were deposited by short-lived rivers and lakes on an alluvial plain with a combination of dune field paleoenvironments, under a semi-arid climate. The formation is known for its vertebrate fossils in life-like poses, most of which are preserved in unstructured sandstone, indicating a catastrophic rapid burial. This formation has produced numerous dinosaurs, such as closely related protoceratopsid ''Protoceratops''; ankylosaurid ''Pinacosaurus''; alvarezsaurid ''Linhenykus''; dromaeosaurids ''Linheraptor'' and ''Velociraptor''; oviraptorids ''Machairasaurus'' and ''Wulatelong''; and troodontids ''Linhevenator'', ''Papiliovenator'', and ''Philovenator''. Other paleofauna from this unit comprises a variety of squamates and mammals, and nanhsiungchelyids turtles.


See also

* Timeline of ceratopsian research


References


External links


HVNHM on ''Bagaceratops''
{{Taxonbar, from=Q131256 Late Cretaceous dinosaurs of Asia Coronosaurs Fossil taxa described in 1975 Taxa named by Halszka Osmólska Taxa named by Teresa Maryańska Ornithischian genera