4.7 Article

Exquisite air sac histological traces in a hyperpneumatized nanoid sauropod dinosaur from South America

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SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
卷 11, 期 1, 页码 -

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-03689-8

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  1. Departamento de Pos-Graduacao do Instituto de Geociencias, Unicamp
  2. Brazilian National Council for Scientific and Technological Development [CNPq 131.777/2018-1, 130.280/2018-6, 303527/2017-0]
  3. Brazilian Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel (CAPES) [001]
  4. FAPESP [2019/16727-3]
  5. Colecionadores de Ossos

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This study reports the presence of pneumosteum in a nanoid saltasaurid titanosaur, confirming the hypothesis and providing a detailed description. It suggests that even small-bodied sauropod clades could have highly pneumatized postcranial skeletons, a trait possibly inherited from their large-bodied ancestors.
This study reports the occurrence of pneumosteum (osteohistological structure related to an avian-like air sac system) in a nanoid (5.7-m-long) saltasaurid titanosaur from Upper Cretaceous Brazil. We corroborate the hypothesis of the presence of an air sac system in titanosaurians based upon vertebral features identified through external observation and computed tomography. This is the fifth non-avian dinosaur taxon in which histological traces of air sacs have been found. We provided a detailed description of pneumatic structures from external osteology and CT scan data as a parameter for comparison with other taxa. The camellate pattern found in the vertebral centrum (ce) of this taxon and other titanosaurs shows distinct architectures. This might indicate whether cervical or lung diverticula pneumatized different elements. A cotylar internal plate of bone tissue sustains radial camellae (rad) in a condition similar to Alamosaurus and Saltasaurus. Moreover, circumferential chambers (cc) near the cotyle might be an example of convergence between diplodocoids and titanosaurs. Finally, we also register for the first time pneumatic foramina (fo) and fossae connecting camellate structures inside the neural canal in Titanosauria and the second published case in non-avian dinosaurs. The extreme pneumaticity observed in this nanoid titanosaur contrasts with previous assumptions that this feature correlates with the evolution of gigantic sizes in sauropodomorphs. This study reinforces that even small-bodied sauropod clades could present a hyperpneumatized postcranial skeleton, a character inherited from their large-bodied ancestors.

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