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The egg-thief architect: experimental oviraptorosaur nesting physiology, the possibility of adult-mediated incubation, and the feasibility of indirect contact incubation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 August 2023

Jason D. Hogan*
Affiliation:
Department of Earth Sciences, Montana State University, Bozeman, Montana 59717, U.S.A.
*
Corresponding author: Jason D. Hogan; E-mail: jason.d.hogan@gmail.com

Abstract

Numerous, high-quality reproduction-related oviraptorosaur fossils have been described. However, oviraptorosaur-style nests are unknown among extant animals, and their curious construction makes nesting behavior difficult to interpret. Experiments were undertaken to better understand oviraptorosaur nesting strategies. A surrogate was constructed and placed atop mock-oviraptorosaur nests built from sand and 36 infertile emu eggs (as Macroolithus approximations) arranged according to the most current nest reconstructions. Thermometers, placed within each egg and throughout the experimental area, recorded energy flow from the surrogate dinosaur into the nesting microenvironment. One experiment examined a basic open nest warmed from above; the second, a fully buried clutch warmed from above; and the third, a nest open like the first but with heating elements (representing hindlimbs) extending down into the nest. It was found that egg temperatures in each scenario surpassed ambient temperatures without requiring excessive energy input. Final clutch temperatures were below most avian values, closer to crocodilian incubation, but are likely conservative, considering experimental parameters. These results may support the idea that an oviraptorosaur could use adult-generated energy to warm a clutch above ambient conditions. Additionally, egg tiers would be warmer and more uniform in temperature if heated by elements within the nest, such as hindlimbs, instead of solely from above. Results from the second experiment indicate that an endothermic adult could possibly warm a clutch fully buried beneath itself despite a barrier. Although not likely a behavior exhibited by oviraptorosaurs, such results suggest an important evolutionary step bridging guarded subterranean eggs and contact-incubated subaerial eggs.

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Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Paleontological Society
Figure 0

Figure 1. Illustrations of different oviraptorosaur nest interpretations. Upper-level eggs are white; second level, light gray; and the deepest level, dark gray. Dotted lines indicate burial. Inset boxes show egg organization. Not to scale. A, Eggs vertical or subvertical, arranged in a spiral pattern, single level, buried in a chamber of organic material (gray space), and covered with sand (Sabath 1991). B, Disorganized clutch of subhorizontal eggs, multiple layers, and placed in an open pit with a slightly raised rim. Illustrated in both Norell et al. (1995) and Clark et al. (1999), although it does not match the in-text description. C, Two ring-like layers of partially buried, paired, and subhorizontal eggs arranged in an open nest that is more likely a mound than a pit. Matches in-text descriptions by Norell et al. (1995, 2018), Clark et al. (1999), and Fanti et al. (2012). D, A single layer of unburied, subhorizontal eggs arranged in a spiral pattern within an open mound nest (Dong and Currie 1996). E, Two stacked rings of subhorizontal eggs sequestered in a fully buried nest (Deeming 2002, 2006). F, A three-tiered open mound nest with partially buried eggs arranged in rings. The eggs sit at 30–40° angles with their blunt ends interior. Described by Yang et al. (2019b) and the most current, general interpretation.

Figure 1

Figure 2. Four nesting oviraptorosaurs, redrawn from Norell et al. (1995) and Clark et al. (1999) (A), Norell et al. (2018) (B), Bi et al. (2021) (C), and Fanti et al. (2012) (D). Shown at the same scale. Gray circles represent approximate clutch areas reconstructed by circumscribing circles on concyclic triangles (yellow) derived from the farthest three points of egg material in each clutch. Estimations are likely larger than actual (see clutch represented by C; Bi et al. 2021), but are useful for specimen comparison. The Citipati osmolskae in A has an estimated mass of 102 kg and a clutch area of 4700 cm2. B, Also C. osmolskae, has an estimated mass of 115 kg and clutch area of 5090 cm2. C, An indeterminate oviraptorosaur has an estimated mass of 110 kg and a clutch area of 6020 cm2. D, Nemegtomaia barsboldi, has an estimated mass of 58 kg (Fanti et al. 2012), but a clutch area of 8730 cm2. Yang et al. (2019b) suggest that oviraptorosaurs were unable to cover their nests based on N. barsboldi (D), but this specimen is poorly preserved and yields vastly different body mass:clutch area ratios than other adult–clutch oviraptorosaur associations.

Figure 2

Table 1. Estimated adult oviraptorid masses, clutch area, and mass:clutch area ratios for specimens of adult–clutch associations.

Figure 3

Figure 3. Photographs of the experimental arrangement. A, Nonviable emu eggs placed in a three-level oviraptorosaur-style clutch before experimentation. B, The blunt end of each egg was carefully tapped open to allow a thermometer to be placed inside before resealing. C, Eggs back into place with thermometers inserted. D, Close-up of experimental eggs. Central column probes are visible attached to a stake in the middle of the clutch (stake top was truncated before tests were run). E, Surrogate dinosaur seen from above. It held ~70 kg of water, heated to approximately 39°C, and had a total mass of ~80 kg. F, Surrogate shown as it looked while resting on the nest in all experiments.

Figure 4

Figure 4. Diagram of the surrogate dinosaur, nest system, and experimental configurations. A, Cross section of the surrogate and nest. B, Experiment 1 setup, a basic open nest, as described by Yang et al. (2019b), heated from above. The surrogate rested on top of the nest structure, with the majority of its weight held by a pulley. C, Experiment 2 setup, identical to Experiment 1, except the internal air pocket of the nest was filled with sediment to create a subterranean nesting system. D, Experiment 3 setup, identical to Experiment 1, except that water was circulated down through pipes and into the nest from the surrogate. Designed to mimic an open nest where an adult might use its hindlimbs or similar to warm the clutch from within instead of above. E, Pullout showing thermometer placement (black dots) within the nest environment.

Figure 5

Figure 5. Temperature trends of the three egg levels, surrogate dinosaur, and the ambient air and ground throughout each experiment: A–C, Experiment 1; D–F, Experiment 2; G–I, Experiment 3. Left-side graphs (A, D, G) map the first 60 minutes of energy flow into the nest, center graphs (B, E, H) depict the following 7 hours, and right-side graphs (C, F, I) show the remaining time. All nest scenarios showed warming trends similar to modern bird nests, a quasi-logarithmic curve. Eggs warm more slowly and plateau at lower temperatures in Experiment 2 (D–F). Additionally, there is a greater temperature difference between each egg level. Eggs in levels 2 and 3 of Experiment 3 warmed more quickly than in Experiment 1, and these levels reached higher average temperatures with less segregation.

Figure 6

Figure 6. Box and whisker plot of the final (160 hr) egg temperature values from each level (red, level 1; blue, level 2; yellow, level 3) of each experiment. Box encompasses upper and lower quartiles; whiskers, the minimum and maximum values; interior line, the median; and interior circle, the mean. A, Values from Experiment 1, the basic open nest. B, Temperatures from Experiment 2, the fully buried clutch. C, Egg temperatures from Experiment 3, the interiorly warmed clutch. Eggs represented in B are cooler than the other experiments with more significant temperature differences between levels. The eggs shown in C have more temperature overlap than in other scenarios, and overall less temperature differentiation between levels. The temperature spread between each averaged egg level was 2.5°C in Experiment 1, 4.2°C in Experiment 2, and 0.9°C in Experiment 3.

Figure 7

Figure 7. Heat map profiles reconstructed from initial and final temperature readings (rounded to the nearest degree) in each experiment: A, Experiment 1; B, Experiment 2; C, Experiment 3. Starting temperatures of the nest and clutch in each experiment were between 23°C and 19°C. In general, temperature gradients seem compacted in the vertical axis, likely due to contact with the cool cement floor of the experimental area (18–20°C). A, Eggs were kept well above ambient air (22.2°C) and floor (20.3°C) temperatures. Sediments in the nest structure, above the baseline, we also kept above ambient temperatures, with the center of the nest at 31.0°C. B, Overall, eggs did not reach temperatures as high as seen in Experiment 1; however, the upper two levels came close. As seen in the temperature profile, if located more centrally, the eggs may have warmed even more. Energy from the surrogate clearly penetrates the sand, influencing depths even 30 cm below. This might be extended if the sediment profile itself were deepened instead of discontinuing on a cement floor. Current research (Wiemann et al. 2017; Norell et al. 2018; Yang et al. 2019b; Bi et al. 2021) indicates that oviraptorosaur eggs were not fully buried, but data from this experiment suggest that it may nonetheless be possible for buried eggs to be warmed by an attending endothermic adult—perhaps a necessary step in the evolution of subaerial eggs. C, When heating elements were extended into the nest, the entire microenvironment warmed significantly. Such a heating strategy could potentially be implemented through an adult's legs, feet, or other exposed ventral skin.

Figure 8

Table 2. Averaged egg temperatures from each level at selected intervals.

Figure 9

Figure 8. Hypothetical oviraptorosaur nesting depiction and nest surface area comparison. A, It is perhaps possible that an oviraptorosaur could have warmed its nest cavity by radiating energy from exposed skin, perhaps on the hindlimbs or underbelly. Oviraptorosaur adult–clutch associations preserve a brooding posture with their legs centrally placed within the nest, likely allowing the adult to cover the clutch without harming the eggs (see Tanaka et al. 2018a). This leg positioning would also be ideal for warming the nest from within. B, The interior hollow of an oviraptorosaur-style nest approximates the shape of a conical frustum (truncated cone). The eggs are emplaced within the wall of the frustum. If the frustum wall were laid out flat, given similar dimensions to a medium-sized oviraptorosaur nest (upper diameter = 60 cm, lower diameter = 20 cm, height = 20 cm) then it would have roughly 25% more nest surface area than a flat, circular nest of the same upper diameter (C). (Egg number and arrangement shown at the bottom of B and C are relative and do not reflect actual spacing or maximum egg counts.) Given the increased nest surface area, and assuming eggs are spaced similarly, a three-dimensional oviraptorosaur-type nest could hold more eggs than a flat, monolayer nest. If oviraptorosaurs were able to use their own body heat to warm their clutches, then their peculiar, three-dimensional clutch arrangement might play a role in aiding the successful incubation of their notably large clutch volumes.

Figure 10

Figure 9. Indirect contact incubation could provide the mechanism needed to move from reptilian subterranean to avian subaerial nesting states. A, Basal ectothermic (blue) archosaurs attend their buried clutches, and the fossil record shows that some maniraptorans, likely endothermic (red), attended their partially buried eggs (B) as well. Contact incubation of fully exposed eggs would be more effective than incubating partially buried eggs, making an evolutionary trajectory between the two appear straightforward. While partial egg burial (B) is a convenient halfway marker between subterranean and subaerial states (C, as seen in modern birds), it is unclear how any measure of egg exposure evolved in the first place. D, Perhaps, before egg exposure, an attending endothermic adult could transmit some measure of metabolic energy through a barrier of sediment to a buried clutch. Over time this could drive clutches toward shallower burial to increase exposure to the adult's metabolic energy. E, Experimental investigation suggests that energy transmission through a sediment barrier is possible, with clutches in such scenarios being warmed significantly beyond ambient temperatures. Eggs closer to the surface experience greater thermal benefits than those buried deeper. Buried eggs experience a measure of protection from predation and the elements that would be lessened as they are laid closer to the surface—but the presence of an attending, endothermic adult would alleviate the effects of these environmental pressures.