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[dinosaur] Dinosaur endocranium development from ostrich and alligator brain growth



Ben Creisler
bcreisler@gmail.com

A new paper:


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Krishna Hu, J. Logan King, Cheyenne A. Romick, David L. Dufeau, Lawrence M. Witmer, Thomas L. Stubbs, Emily J. Rayfield & Michael J. Benton (2020)
Ontogenetic endocranial shape change in alligators and ostriches and implications for the development of the nonâavian dinosaur endocranium.
The Anatomical Record (advance online publication)
doi: https://doi.org/10.1002/ar.24579
https://anatomypubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ar.24579


Birds and crocodiles show radically different patterns of brain development, and it is of interest to compare these to determine the pattern of brain growth expected in dinosaurs. Here we provide atlases of 3D brain (endocast) reconstructions for Alligator mississippiensis (alligator) and Struthio camelus (ostrich) through ontogeny, prepared as digital restorations from CT scans of stained head and dry skull specimens. Our morphometric analysis confirms that ostrich brains do not change significantly in shape during postnatal growth, whereas alligator brains unfold from a cramped birdâlike shape in the hatchling to an elongate, straight structure in the adult. We confirm that birds exhibit paedomorphic dinosaur endocranial traits such as retaining an enlarged and compact brain shape in the adult, whereas crocodiles show peramorphic traits where the brain elongates with growth as the skull elongates. These atlases of ontogenetic stages of modern bird and crocodilian endocrania provide a basis for comparison of nonâavian dinosaur endocasts and consideration of the divergence of the 'avian' and 'crocodilian' modes of brain development and heterochronic change on phylogenies.

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