News Release

Dinosaur fossils reveal evolution's big picture, says Paul Sereno

Peer-Reviewed Publication

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Washington, DC - Dinosaur fossils are providing the answers to some of scientists' biggest questions about evolution, according to paleontologist Paul Sereno, who has assembled the most up-to-date picture yet of dinosaur evolution in the 25 June 1999 issue of Science.

In his article, which is part of Science's special issue about evolution, Sereno shows how dinosaur fossils hold the clues to questions such as: How does an upstart group of species beat out the dominant group? How do organisms develop nifty new tricks like flying? And how does the breakup of a supercontinent affect the course of evolution?

These major events in the history of life, involving global patterns and trends that occur over millions of years, are crucial aspects of evolution not accessible from the anatomy and genes of living animals. "Certain questions about evolution can only be investigated at the grandest scales using the fossil record," said Sereno, who is from the University of Chicago.

The radiation of new dinosaur species was a spectacular and long-lasting success. In fact, during the Mesozoic era (248 to 65 million years ago), all the land animals more than one meter long were dinosaurs. The only other group of animals to dominate their ecosystem so thoroughly were the mammals of the following era, the Cenozoic (65 million years ago to the present).

Paleontologists have argued about the secret of the dinosaurs' success for years. Does one group of animals make it to the top by gradually pushing other, less well-adapted animals out of the picture? Or does the group take a more opportunistic approach, moving in after a mass extinction event has wiped out its competition? Recent dinosaur fossil finds suggest the latter, Sereno and other scientists conclude. For example, the dinosaurs' heyday didn't begin until at least 15 million years after the first dinosaurs appeared on Earth, but it did coincide with a mass extinction that killed off many other reptiles. It now looks like both the dinosaurs and the large mammals that followed the dinosaurs' extinction came to dominate their world essentially by accident-not as the inevitable outcome of natural selection.

Of course, dinosaurs didn't disappear completely. Some evolved into birds, and the stages of this transformation are recorded in the fossil record. According to Sereno, recent discoveries have been particularly useful in shedding light on how animal groups develop major new abilities such as flying. Several spectacular finds in recent years have shown scientists just how effectively dinosaurs recycled many of their features that had been originally designed for other purposes. Once the "avian dinosaurs" were launched, they quickly evolved in ways that helped them fly even better, shrinking several times in body size, for example.

A third big question about evolution concerns the role that major changes in geography, caused by the shifting of the Earth's tectonic plates, play in the evolution of new species. The dinosaurs are a prime subject for studying this problem, because they reached the height of their diversity during the breakup of the supercontinent Pangaea in the early Cretaceous period (about 150 to 100 million years ago). It is now becoming clear that this diversity arose as a patchwork of regional extinctions of certain species and replacements by others, not by the creation of new lineages, which has been considered as an alternative possibility.

Eventually, the dinosaurs met their demise at the end of the Cretaceous. But Sereno isn't letting the mystery of these animals' disappearance overshadow the wealth of information they left behind during their reign. "The Mesozoic world and the dinosaurs offer a look into one of the grandest experiments in the history of life," Sereno said.

Science's special issue on evolution also contains five other articles, an editorial, and a special news package. One article looks at recent genetic evidence that has shaken scientists' confidence in the traditional classification system used to assemble the universal "tree of life." Another discusses recent progress in understanding the influences that shaped the early unfolding of animal diversity during an event known as the Cambrian explosion. A third provides insight into why nature chose RNA as the fundamental molecule for life. Two other articles discuss the evolution of species interactions and how paleontology is becoming an increasingly interdisciplinary endeavor. The special section also includes an editorial by Stephen Jay Gould about evolution and creationism, and a special package of three news articles.

Dr. Sereno will be participating in a public lecture, co-sponsored by Science and bild der wissenschaft, at the University of Munich, on 29 June, at 6:00 p.m. For more information, please contact Diane Dondershine, at 202-326-7088 (phone), or ddonders@aaas.org(email).

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ORDER ARTICLE #12: "The Evolution of Dinosaurs," by P. C. Sereno at U. of Chicago in Chicago, IL. CONTACT: Paul C. Sereno at 773-702-8115 (phone), 773-834-0545 (fax), or dinosaur@uchicago.edu (e-mail)

ORDER ARTICLE #9: "Phylogenetic Classification and the Universal Tree," by W. F. Doolittle at Dalhousie U. in Nova Scotia, Canada. CONTACT: W. Ford Doolittle at 902-494-3569 (phone), 902-494-1355 (fax), or ford@is.dal.ca (e-mail)

ORDER ARTICLE #11: "Early Animal Evolution: Emerging Perspectives from Comparative Biology and the Geologic Record," by A. H. Knoll at Harvard U. in Cambridge, MA; S. B. Carroll at Howard Hughes Medical Institute and U. of Wisconsin in Madison, WI. CONTACT: Andrew H. Knoll at 617-495-9306 (phone), 617-495-5667 (fax), or aknoll@oeb.harvard.edu (e-mail)

ORDER ARTICLE #8: "Chemical Etiology of Nucleic Acid Structure," by A. Eschenmoser at Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, CA and Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule in Zürich, Switzerland. CONTACT: Albert Eschenmoser at 411-256-2893 (phone)

ORDER ARTICLE #7: "The Evolution of Species Interactions," by J. N. Thompson at Washington State U. in Pullman, WA. CONTACT: John N. Thompson at 509-335-7466 (phone), 509-335-3517 (fax), or jnt@wsu.edu (e-mail)

ORDER ARTICLE #6: "The Future of the Fossil Record," by D. Jablonski at U. of Chicago in Chicago, IL. CONTACT: David Jablonski at 312-702-8163 (phone), 312-702-9505 (fax), or djablons@midway.uchicago.edu (e-mail)

ORDER ARTICLE #26: "Special News Section:," by News Staff at Science in Washington, DC. CONTACT: Heather Singmaster at 202-326-6440 (phone), 202-789-0455 (fax), or scipak@aaas.org (e-mail)

ORDER ARTICLE #0: "Darwin's More Stately Mansion," by Stephen Jay Gould.

For copies of these articles please email scipak@aaas.org, call 202-326-6440 or fax the form below to 202-789-0455.

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