Thursday, January 14, 2016

The New Year of January. Juravenator

  Juravenator was a small predatory dinosaur active‭ ‬in‭ ‬the late Jurassic of Europe.‭ ‬It appears to have been a fleet footed hunter that specialised in either invertebrates or small vertebrates like lizards.‭ ‬The scleral rings of Juravenator show similarities with nocturnal birds strongly suggesting that Juravenator was most active at night.
       The holotype specimen of Juravenator was assumed to have a covering of primitive protofeathers,‭ ‬something that gave rise to the nickname Borsti‭ (‬after bristle haired dogs‭)‬.‭ ‬However when skin impressions belonging to Juravenator were initially described they were found to have no clear indication of protofeathers just scales.‭ ‬This is markedly different from other members of the Compsognathidae such as Sinosauropteryx which are known to have had them.‭ ‬Other longer known members of the group such as Compsognathus neither confirm or deny the presence of feathers,‭ ‬but Compsognathus itself is morphologically similar to the‭ ‘‬dino-bird‭’ ‬Archaeopteryx in its skeletal make up.‭ ‬This means that the Compsognathidae group may either end up being re-shuffled into feathered and non-feathered,‭ ‬or it should be accepted that small dinosaurs being feathered is not a hard and fast rule that can be applied to all genera.‭
       Of course further fossil discoveries may yet reveal a completely different realisation,‭ ‬and a follow up study in‭ ‬2010‭ ‬by Xu Xing reported that when viewed under Ultraviolet light a light covering of protofeathers are visible.‭ ‬It‭’‬s possible that as a juvenile its covering of feathers was not fully developed.‭ ‬However it is also possible that Juravenator had protofeathers upon hatching which then disappeared when it grew older.‭ ‬Alternatively the type specimen may have been in a moult when it died resulting in the appearance of reduced feathers for the living animal.

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