Allosauroids
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Carnosauria is an extinct group of carnivorous theropod dinosaurs that lived during the Jurassic and Cretaceous periods. While Carnosauria was historically considered largely synonymous with Allosauroidea, some recent studies have revived Carnosauria as clade including both Allosauroidea and Megalosauroidea (which is sometimes recovered as paraphyletic with respect to Allosauroidea), and thus including the majority of non-Coelurosauria, coelurosaurian members of theropod clade Tetanurae. Other researchers have found Allosauroidea and Megalosauroidea to be unrelated groups.Cau A. (2024)
A Unified Framework for Predatory Dinosaur Macroevolution
Bollettino della Società Paleontologica Italiana, 63(1): 1-19.
Distinctive characteristics of carnosaurs include large eye sockets, a long narrow skull and modifications of the leg (anatomy), legs and pelvis such as the thigh (femur) being longer than the shin (tibia). Carnosaurs first appeared in the Middle Jurassic around , and the last definitive carnosaur Family (biology), family Carcharodontosauridae became extinct in the Turonian epoch of the Late Cretaceous around . Some theropod remains, once suggested to be putative carcharodontosaurids from the Maastrichtian epoch (72–66 mya) in South America, were later reinterpreted as those of other theropod groups including the Abelisauridae, abelisaurids and maniraptorans.


History of study

Carnosauria has traditionally been used as a dumping ground for all large theropods. Even non-dinosaurs, such as the rauisuchian ''Teratosaurus'', were once considered carnosaurs. However, analysis in the 1980s and 1990s revealed that other than size, the group shared very few characteristics, making it polyphyly, polyphyletic. Most former carnosaurs (such as the megalosaurids, the spinosaurids, and the ceratosaurs) were scientific classification, reclassified as more primitive theropods. Others (such as the tyrannosaurids) that were more closely related to birds were placed in Coelurosauria. Modern Cladistics, cladistic analysis defines Carnosauria as those Tetanurae, tetanurans sharing a more recent common ancestor with ''Allosaurus'' than with modern birds.


Anatomy

Carnosaurs share certain distinctive features, one of which is a triangular-shaped wiktionary:pubic boot, pubic boot. They also have 3 fingers per hand, with the second and third digit being approximately equal in length. The femur is larger than the tibia. Another defining feature of carnosaurs is that the Chevron (anatomy), chevron bases on their tails have anterior and posterior bone growth. The largest carnosaurs can reach up to 10 meters in length. The length of the body from the tail to the hip is between 54% and 62% of the total body length, and the length of the body from the head to the hip is between 38% and 46% of the total body length. Carnosaurs scaled their limbs relative to their body in a way similar to how other large theropods, like the Tyrannosauridae, tyrannosaurids, did. During the Cretaceous, some carnosaurs grew to sizes similar to those of the largest tyrannosaurids. These large carnosaurs lived in the same time period as the other large theropods found in the upper Morrison and Tendaguru formations. Carnosaurs maintained a similar center of mass across all sizes, which is found to be between 37% and 58% of the femoral length anterior to the hip. Other similarities across all carnosaurs include the structure of their hind limb and pelvis. The pelvis in particular is thought to be designed to reduce stress regardless of body size. In particular, the way the femur is inclined reduces the bending and torsion stress. Furthermore, like other animals with tails, carnosaurs possess a caudofemoralis longus (CFL) muscle that allowed them to flex theirs. Larger carnosaurs are found to have a lower CFL muscle-to-body-mass proportion that smaller carnosaurs. In addition to body similarities, most carnosaurs, especially most allosauroids are also united by certain skull features. Some of the defining ones include a smaller Mandible, mandibular fenestra, a short Quadrate bone, quadrate bone, and a short connection between the braincase and the palate. Allosauroid skulls are about 2.5 to 3 times longer as they are tall. Their narrow skull along with their serrated teeth allow carnosaurs to better slice flesh off of their prey. Carnosaur teeth are flat and have equally-sized Denticle (tooth feature), denticles on both edges. The flat side of the tooth face the sides of the skull, while the edges align on the same plane as the skull. From analyzing the skull of different carnosaurs, the volume of the cranial vault ranges between 95 milliliters in ''Sinraptor'' to 250 milliliters in ''Giganotosaurus''. ''Allosaurus'' and ''Concavenator'' preserve skin impressions showing their integument. In ''Allosaurus,'' skin impressions showing small Scale (zoology), scales measuring 1-3 mm are known from the side of the torso and the mandible. Another skin impression from the ventral side of the neck preserves broad scutate scales. An impression from the base of the tail preserves larger scales around 2 cm in diameter. However, it has been noted that these may be Sauropoda, sauropod scales due to their similarity and the fact that non-theropod remains were discovered associated with the tail of this particular ''Allosaurus'' specimen. ''Concavenator'' preserves rectangular scutate scales on the underside of the tail, as well as scutate scales on the feet along with small scales. A series of knobs on the ulna of ''Concavenator'' have been interpreted by some authors as quill knobs theorized to have supported primitive quills; however this interpretation has been questioned, and they have been suggested to represent traces of ligaments instead.


Classification

Within Carnosauria, there is a slightly more exclusive clade, superfamily Allosauroidea. The clade Allosauroidea was originally named by Othniel Charles Marsh, but it was given a formal definition by Phil Currie and Zhao, and later used as a stem-based taxon by Paul Sereno in 1997. Sereno was the first to provide a stem-based definition for the Allosauroidea in 1998, defining the clade as "All neotetanurans closer to ''Allosaurus'' than to Neornithes." Kevin Padian used a node-based definition in his 2007 study which defined the Allosauroidea as ''Allosaurus'', ''Sinraptor'', their most recent common ancestor, and all of its descendants. Thomas R. Holtz and colleagues and Philip J. Currie, Phil Currie and Kenneth Carpenter, Ken Carpenter, among others, have followed this node-based definition.Holtz, T. R., Jr. and Osmólska H. 2004. Saurischia; pp. 21–24 in D. B. Weishampel, P. Dodson, and H. Osmólska (eds.), ''The Dinosauria'' (2nd ed.), University of California Press, Berkeley. Depending on the study, Carnosauria and Allosauroidea are sometimes considered synonymous. In such cases, several researchers have elected to use Allosauroidea over Carnosauria.


Conventional phylogeny

The following cladogram illustrates the phylogenetic position of Allosauroidea within Theropoda. It is a simplified version of the tree presented in a synthesis of the relationships of the major theropod groups based on various studies conducted in the 2010s. The ⊞ button can be clicked to expand the clade and display the interrelationships of the four major allosauroid groups.


Alternative hypotheses

The composition of the clade Carnosauria has been controversial among scientists since at least 2010 in archosaur paleontology, 2010. Different clades have been recovered by different authors, and a scientific consensus has yet to emerge. One such clade is Neovenatoridae, a proposed clade of carcharodontosaurian carnosaurs uniting some primitive members of the group such as ''Neovenator'' with the Megaraptora, a group of theropods with controversial affinities. Other studies recover megaraptorans as basal Coelurosauria, coelurosaurs unrelated to carcharodontosaurs. Other theropods with uncertain affinities such as ''Gualicho'', ''Chilantaisaurus'' and ''Deltadromeus'' are also sometimes included. Neovenatoridae, as formulated by these authors, contained ''Neovenator'', ''Chilantaisaurus'', and a newly named clade: Megaraptora. Megaraptora contained ''Megaraptor'', ''Fukuiraptor'', ''Orkoraptor'', ''Aerosteon'', and ''Australovenator''. These genera were allied with the other neovenatorids on the basis of several features spread out throughout the skeleton, particularly the large amount of pneumatization present. The pneumatic ilium of ''Aerosteon'' was particularly notable, as ''Neovenator'' was the only other taxon known to have that trait at the time. Neovenatorids were envisioned as the latest-surviving allosauroids, which were able to persist well into the Late Cretaceous due to their low profile and coelurosaur-like adaptations. Later studies supported this hypothesis, such as Carrano, Benson & Sampson large study of tetanuran relationships in 2012, and Zanno & Makovicky description of the newly discovered theropod ''Siats'' in 2013, which they placed within Megaraptora. ''Fukuiraptor'' and ''Australovenator'' were consistently found to be close relatives of each other; this was also the case for ''Aerosteon'' and ''Megaraptor''. ''Orkoraptor'' was a wiktionary:wildcard, "wildcard" taxon difficult to place with certainty. Phylogenetic studies conducted by Benson, Carrano and Brusatte (2010) and Carrano, Benson and Sampson (2012) recovered the group Megaraptora and a few other taxa as members of the Neovenatoridae. This would make neovenatorids the latest-surviving allosauroids; at least one megaraptoran, ''Orkoraptor'', lived near the end of the Mesozoic era, dating to the early Maastrichtian stage of the latest Cretaceous period, about 70 million years ago. The cladogram below follows a 2016 analysis by Sebastián Apesteguía, Nathan D. Smith, Rubén Juarez Valieri, and Peter J. Makovicky based on the dataset of Carrano ''et al.'' (2012). Subsequent analyses have contradicted the above hypothesis. Novas and colleagues conducted an analysis in 2012 which found that ''Neovenator'' was closely related to carcharodontosaurids, simultaneously found ''Megaraptor'' and related genera to be Coelurosauria, coelurosaurs closely related to Tyrannosauridae, tyrannosaurids. However, Novas ''et al.'' subsequently found that megaraptorans lacked most of the key features in the hands of derived coelurosaurs including ''Guanlong'' and ''Deinonychus''. Instead, their hands retain a number of primitive characteristics seen in basal tetanurans such as ''Allosaurus''. Nevertheless, there are still a number of other traits that support megaraptorans as members of the Coelurosauria. Other taxa like ''Deltadromeus'' and ''Gualicho'' have been alternatively recovered as coelurosaurs or noasaurid ceratosaurs. Over the recent years, a majority of researchers have increasingly classified megaraptorans as Coelurosauria, coelurosaurs. Several recent analyses do not find a relationship between ''Neovenator'' and megaraptorans, which suggests that the latter were not carnosaurs or allosauroids. As a result of these findings, and the fact that ''Neovenator'' itself is the only uncontroversial neovenatorid, the family Neovenatoridae sees little use in recent publications. In 2019, Rauhut and Pol described ''Asfaltovenator, Asfaltovenator vialidadi'', a basal allosauroid displaying a mosaic of primitive and derived features seen within Tetanurae. Their phylogenetic analysis found traditional Megalosauroidea to represent a basal evolutionary grade, grade of carnosaurs, paraphyly, paraphyletic with respect to Allosauroidea. Because the authors amended the definition of Allosauroidea to include all theropods that are closer to ''Allosaurus fragilis'' than to either ''Megalosaurus bucklandii'' or Neornithes, the Piatnitzkysauridae was found to fall within Allosauroidea. A cladogram displaying the relationships they recovered is shown below. In 2025, photos of the destroyed holotype of ''Carcharodontosaurus'' were re-examined by Maximilian Kellermann and colleagues and were used to erect the new genus ''Tameryraptor''. A byproduct of this study was the recovery of a novel phylogenetic arrangement of carnosaurs. They did not recover megalosauroids as close relatives of allosauroids. Within Allosauroidea, their analyses, based on the dataset published by Wang and colleagues in 2017, consistently found Metriacanthosauridae and Carcharodontosauridae as sister taxa. They named this novel clade Carcharodontosauriformes and defined it as the least-inclusive clade containing both ''Carcharodontosaurus'' and ''Sinraptor''. A simplified version of one of the cladograms they published are shown below.


Paleobiology and behavior

Multiple severe injuries have been found on allosauroid remains, which implies that allosauroids were frequently in dangerous situations and supports the hypothesis of an active, predatory lifestyle. Despite the multitude of injuries, only a few of those injuries show signs of infection. For those injuries that did become infected, the infections were usually local to the site of the injury, implying that the allosauroid immune response was able to quickly stop any infection from spreading to the rest of the body. This type of immune response is similar to modern reptilian immune responses; reptiles secrete fibrin near infected areas and localize the infection before it can spread via the bloodstream. The injuries were also found to be mostly healed. This healing may indicate that allosauroids had an intermediate Basal metabolic rate, metabolic rate, similar to non-avian reptiles, which means they require fewer nutrients in order to survive. A lower nutrient requirement means allosauroids do not need to undertake frequent hunts, which lowers their risk of sustaining traumatic injuries. Although the remains of other large theropods like tyrannosaurids bear evidence of fighting within their species and with other predators, the remains of allosauroids do not bear much evidence of injuries from theropod combat. Most notably, despite a good fossil record, allosauroid skulls lack the distinctive face-biting wounds that are common in tyrannosaurid skulls, leaving open the question of if allosauroids engaged in interspecies and intraspecies fighting. Remains of the allosauroid ''Mapusaurus'' are also often found in groups, which could imply the existence of social behavior. While there are alternative explanations for the groupings, like predator traps or Habitat destruction, habitat reduction due to drought, the frequency of finding allosauroid remains in groups supports the social animal theory. As social animals, allosauroids would share the burden of hunting, allowing injured members of the pack to recover faster.


Paleobiogeography

The Biogeography, paleobiogeographical history of allosauroids closely follows the order that Pangaea separated into the modern continents. By the Middle Jurassic period, tetanurans had spread to every continent and diverged into the allosauroids and the coelurosaurs. Allosauroids first appeared in the Middle Jurassic period and were the first giant taxa (weighing more than 2 tons) in theropod history. Along with members of the superfamily Megalosauroidea, the allosauroids were the apex predators that occupied the Middle Jurassic to the early Late Cretaceous periods. Allosauroids have been found in North America, South America, Europe, Africa, and Asia. A probable carcharodontosaurian specimen from the upper Strzelecki Group and the Eumeralla Formation (Aptian-Albian) of Australia might potentially extend their known distribution. Specifically, a world-wide dispersal of carcharodontosaurids likely happened in the Early Cretaceous. It has been hypothesized that the dispersal involved Italy's Apulia region (the “heel” of the Italian peninsula), which was connected to Africa by a land bridge during the Early Cretaceous period; various dinosaur footprints found in Apulia support this theory. Allosauroids were present in both the northern and southern continents during the Jurassic and Early Cretaceous, but they were later displaced by the tyrannosauroids in North America and Asia during the Late Cretaceous. This is likely due to regional extinction events, which, along with increased species isolation through the severing of land connections between the continents, differentiated many dinosaurs in the Late Cretaceous.


See also

*Bone Wars *Cenomanian-Turonian boundary event *Theropod paleopathology


References


External links

* {{Taxonbar, from=Q131190 Carnosauria, Dinosaur clades