Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-4hhp2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-15T03:42:39.944Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The evolution of cranial display structures in hadrosaurian dinosaurs

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 April 2016

James A. Hopson*
Affiliation:
Department of Anatomy, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60637

Abstract

A theory is presented that cranial crests of hadrosaurs were visual and acoustical display organs. Facial morphology and phylogeny of the Hadrosauridae and earlier theories of crest function are reviewed. The following hypothesis is presented: cranial crests, whether hollow or solid, served as visual signal structures, and hollow lambeosaur crests were also vocal resonators; all crests promoted successful matings within species, i.e., they served as premating genetic isolating mechanisms. The following predictions are tested and found to support the hypothesis: (1) hadrosaurs had well-developed eyes and ears; (2) external features of crests varied independently of internal structure; (3) crest variations were species-specific and sexually-dimorphic; (4) crest distinctiveness correlates with species diversity; (5) crest size tended to increase through time. The circumnarial depression on the side of the face in hadrosaurines housed an inflatable diverticulum of the nasal passage which served as a visual display organ. Primitive hadrosaurs (kritosaurs) possessed a small nasal horn used as a butting weapon in intraspecific combat. Because the weapon was also used in intimidative displays, narial diverticula evolved to draw attention to it. In the kritosaur Brachylophosaurus fighting was modified to ritualized head-pushing using the flat nasal “shield”. Saurolophines expanded the diverticula on to the elongated nasal horn, converting the weapon to a dominance rank symbol. In non-crested edmontosaurs, enlarged diverticula assumed a vocalization function. Lambeosaurs created resonators by enclosing the diverticula in bone; they further enhanced the resonator function of the nose by forming elongated “organ pipes” in the premaxillae. This “pushed” the olfactory region above the eyes as a conspicuous dome which then was modified to form species-specific visual display organs.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Paleontological Society 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Literature Cited

Abel, O. 1924. Die neuen Dinosaurierfunde in der Oberkreide Canadas. Jahrg. Naturwiss. Berlin. 12:709716.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bakker, R. T. 1971. Dinosaur physiology and the origin of mammals. Evolution. 25:636658.Google Scholar
Bellairs, A. 1970. The Life of Reptiles. Universe Books, New York. 2 vols. 590 pp.Google Scholar
Campbell, B. (ed.) 1972. Sexual Selection and the Descent of Man, 1871–1971. Aldine. New York. 378 pp.Google Scholar
Colbert, E. H. 1945. The Dinosaur Book. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., Man and Nature Publ., no. 14, 156 pp.Google Scholar
Colbert, E. H. 1955. Evolution of the Vertebrates. John Wiley and Sons. New York. 479 pp.Google Scholar
Colbert, E. H. 1961. Dinosaurs. Their Discovery and Their World. Dutton. New York, 300 pp.Google Scholar
Colbert, E. H. 1965. The Age of Reptiles. Weidenfeld and Nicolson. London. 228 pp.Google Scholar
Davitashvili, L. Sh. 1961. Teoriya Polovogo Otbora (The theory of sexual selection). Moscow, Izdatel'stvo Akademii Nauk (Academy of Sciences Press). 538 pp.Google Scholar
Dodson, P. (in press). Taxonomic implications of relative growth in lambeosaurine hadrosaurs.Google Scholar
Eibl-Eibesfeldt, I. 1970. Ethology, the Biology of Behavior. Holt, Rinehart and Winston. New York. 530 pp.Google Scholar
Estes, R., and Berberian, P. 1970. Paleoecology of a later Cretaceous community from Montana. Breviora. 343:135.Google Scholar
Ewer, R. F. 1968. Ethology of Mammals. Plenum Press. New York. 418 pp.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Galton, P. M. 1970. Pachycephalosaurids—dinosaurian battering rams. Discovery, New Haven. 6(1):2332.Google Scholar
Galton, P. M. 1971. A primitive dome-headed dinosaur (Ornithischia: Pachycephalosauridae) from the Lower Cretaceous of England and the function of the dome of pachycephalosaurids. J. Paleont. 45:4047.Google Scholar
Geist, V. 1966. The evolution of horn-like organs. Behaviour 27:175214.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Geist, V. 1971. The relation of social evolution and dispersal in ungulates during the Pleistocene, with emphasis on the Old World deer and the genus Bison. Quaternary Res. 1:283315.Google Scholar
Geist, V. 1972. An ecological and behavioural explanation of mammalian characteristics and their implication to therapsid evolution. Z. Saugetierkunde. 37:115.Google Scholar
Gould, S. J. 1973a. The misnamed, mistreated, and misunderstood Irish elk. Natural History. 82(3):1019.Google Scholar
Gould, S. J. 1973b. Positive allometry of antlers in the “Irish elk”, Megaloceros giganteus. Nature 244:375376.Google Scholar
Gould, S. J. 1974. The origin and function of “bizarre” structures: antler size and skull size in the “Irish elk”, Megaloceros giganteus. Evolution 28:191220.Google Scholar
Guthrie, R. D. 1970. Bison evolution and zoogeography in North America during the Pleistocene. Quart. Rev. Biol. 45:115.Google Scholar
Harris, V. A. 1964. The Life of the Rainbow Lizard. Hutchinson. London. 174 pp.Google Scholar
Heaton, M. J. 1972. The palatal structure of some Canadian Hadrosauridae (Reptilia: Ornithischia) Can. J. Earth Sci. 9:185205.Google Scholar
Jenssen, T. A. 1970. Female response to filmed displays of Anolis nebulosus (Sauria, Iguanidae). Anim. Behav. 18:640647.Google Scholar
King, J. E. 1964. Seals of the World. Brit. Mus. (Nat. Hist.) London. 154 pp.Google Scholar
Kurtén, B. 1968. The Age of the Dinosaurs. World Univ. Library. McGraw-Hill. New York. 255 pp.Google Scholar
Kurzanov, S. M. 1972. O polovom dimorfizme prototseratopov (Sexual dimorphism in protoceratopsians). Paleont. Zhur. 1972:104112.Google Scholar
Langston, W. Jr. 1960. The vertebrate fauna of the Selma Formation of Alabama, Part 6: The dinosaurs. Fieldiana: Geol. Mem. 3:313361.Google Scholar
Lull, R. S., and Wright, N. E. 1942. Hadrosaurian dinosaurs of North America. Geol. Soc. Amer. Spec. Pap. 40:1242.Google Scholar
Mayr, E. 1963. Animal Species and Evolution. Harvard University Press. Cambridge. 797 pp.Google Scholar
Neill, W. T. 1971. The Last of the Ruling Reptiles: Alligators, Crocodiles, and Their Kin. Columbia University Press. New York. 486 pp.Google Scholar
Nopcsa, F. 1929. Sexual differences in ornithopodous dinosaurs. Palaeobiologica. 2:187201.Google Scholar
Ostrom, J. H. 1961. Cranial morphology of the hadrosaurian dinosaurs of North America. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist. Bull. 122:37186.Google Scholar
Ostrom, J. H. 1962. The cranial crests of hadrosaurs. Postilla. 62:129.Google Scholar
Parsons, T. S. 1970. The nose and Jacobson's organ. p. 99191. In, Gans, C. and Parsons, T. S. (eds.). Biology of the Reptilia. Morphology B, Vol. 2. Academic Press. London.Google Scholar
Piveteau, J. 1955. Traité de Paléontologie. Vol. 6. Masson. Paris. 1113 pp.Google Scholar
Rand, A. S., and Williams, E. E. 1970. An estimation of redundancy and information content of anole dewlaps. Amer. Naturalist. 104:99103.Google Scholar
Romer, A. S. 1933. Vertebrate Paleontology. Univ. Chicago Press. Chicago. 491 pp.Google Scholar
Romer, A. S. 1945. Vertebrate Paleontology. (2nd ed.). Univ. Chicago Press. Chicago. 687 pp.Google Scholar
Russell, D. A. 1967. A census of dinosaur specimens collected in western Canada. Nat. Mus. Canada Nat. Hist. Pap. 36:113.Google Scholar
Russell, D. A. 1970. The dinosaurs of Central Asia. Geog. J. 81(6):208215.Google Scholar
Russell, D. A., and Chamney, T. P. 1967. Notes on the biostratigraphy of dinosaurian and microfossil faunas in the Edmonton Formation (Cretaceous), Alberta. Nat. Mus. Canada Nat. Hist. Pap. 35:122.Google Scholar
Russell, L. S. 1946. The crest of the dinosaur Parasaurolophus. Contrib. Roy. Ont. Mus. Paleont. 11:15.Google Scholar
Steel, R. 1969. Ornithischia. In, Kuhn, O. (ed.) Handbuch der Paläoherpetologie. Part 15. Fischer. Stuttgart. 84 pp.Google Scholar
Sternberg, C. M. 1935. Hooded hadrosaurs of the Belly River series of the upper Cretaceous: a comparison, with descriptions of new species. Nat. Mus. Canada, Bull. 77(52):137.Google Scholar
Sternberg, C. M. 1939. Were there proboscisbearing dinosaurs? Discussion of cranial protuberances in the Hadrosauridae. Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. Ser. 2, 3:556560.Google Scholar
Sternberg, C. M. 1942. New restoration of a hooded duck-billed dinosaur. J. Paleontol. 16:133134.Google Scholar
Sternberg, C. M. 1953. A new hadrosaur from the Oldman Formation of Alberta: discussion of nomenclature. Nat. Mus. Canada, Bull. 128:275286.Google Scholar
Sternberg, C. M. 1954. Classification of American duck-billed dinosaurs. J. Paleontol. 28:382383.Google Scholar
Sternberg, C. M. 1964. Function of the elongated narial tubes in the hooded hadrosaurs. J. Paleontol. 38:10031004.Google Scholar
Trivers, R. L. 1972. Parental investment and sexual selection. p. 136179. In, Campbell, B. G. (ed.). Sexual Selection and the Descent of Man, 1871–1971. Aldine Press. New York.Google Scholar
Underwood, G. 1970. The eye. p. 197. In, Gans, C. and Parsons, T. S. (eds.). Biology of the Reptilia. Morphology B, Vol. 2. Academic Press. London.Google Scholar
Versluys, J. 1936. Kranium und Visceralskelett der Sauropsiden. 1. Reptilien. pp. 699808. In, Bolk, , et al., eds. Handbuch der vergleichenden Anatomie der Wirbeltiere. Vol. 4. Urban and Schwarzenberg, Berlin.Google Scholar
Walther, F. 1958. Zum Kampf-und Paarungsverhalten einiger Antilopen. Zs. Tierpsychol. 15:340380.Google Scholar
Wilfarth, M. 1938. Gab es rüsseltragende Dinosaurier? Zeitschr. Deutsche Geol. Gesell. 90:87100.Google Scholar
Wilfarth, M. 1939. Die Nasenbasis der Lambeosaurinae. Zentralbl. Min. Geol. Palaeont. Ser. B, 2439.Google Scholar
Wilfarth, M. 1940. Der Atemrüssel der Hadrosauriden. Halle. 124.Google Scholar
Wilfarth, M. 1947. Rüsseltragende Dinosaurier. Orion 2:525532.Google Scholar
Wiman, C. 1931. Parasaurolophus tubicen, n. sp. aus der Kreide in New Mexico. Nova Acta R. Soc. Sci. Upsaliensis. Ser. 4, 7(5):111.Google Scholar