Monday, April 18, 2016

Many Worlds of April. Saga of the Jurassic. Europasaurus

   Europasaurus was a macronarian sauropod which means it was similar in form to such dinosaurs as Camarasaurus and Brachiosaurus.‭ ‬However Europasaurus itself was much smaller than either of these two genera,‭ ‬in fact it is one of the smallest dinosaurs of its kind.‭ ‬The small size of Europasaurus has been interpreted as a case of insular dwarfism,‭ ‬an occurrence where animals grow smaller as to not exhaust the reduced amounts of food present upon isolated island ecosystems.‭ ‬This dwarfism has been confirmed by study of the bones of Europasaurus which show that it grew at a much slower rate than other sauropods,‭ ‬so while it probably matched them in other biological areas,‭ ‬its upper size limit was always capped at a smaller size of what seems to have been around six meters long.
       Europasaurus growing smaller is a reaction to the layout of Europe during the late Jurassic which was more akin to a collection of island chains rather than the single large landmass of today.‭ ‬Europasaurus is also not the only dinosaur that grew smaller than its direct ancestors,‭ ‬with Magyarosaurus also thought to represent a dwarf form living in Europe during the late Cretaceous period.‭ ‬By contrast the largest sauropods such as Argentinosaurus,‭ ‬Brachiosaurus and Sauroposeidon are all genera from continental land masses where there was more room and growth to support their larger forms.

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