Friday, February 13, 2009

dinosaurs Origins and early evolution - part 3


The first few lines of primitive dinosaurs diversified through the Carnian and Norian stages of the Triassic, most likely by occupying the niches of groups that became extinct.
Traditionally, dinosaurs were thought to have replaced the variety of other Triassic land animals by proving superior through a long period of competition.
This now appears unlikely, for several reasons.
Dinosaurs do not show a pattern of steadily increasing in diversity and numbers, as would be predicted if they were competitively replacing other groups;
instead, they were very rare through the Carnian, making up only 1-2% of individuals present in faunas.
In the Norian, however, after the extinction of several other groups, they became significant components of faunas, representing 50-90% of individuals. Also, what had been viewed as a key adaptation of dinosaurs, their erect stance, is now known to have present in several contemporaneous groups that were not as successful .
Finally, the Late Triassic itself was a time of great upheaval in life, with shifts in plant life, marine life, and climate.
Crurotarsans, today represented only by crocodilians but in the Late Triassic also encompassing such now-extinct groups as aetosaurs, phytosaurs, ornithosuchians, and rauisuchians, were actually more diverse in the Late Triassic than dinosaurs, indicating that the survival of dinosaurs had more to do with luck than superiority.