Abstract

Elasmosaurid plesiosaurians were globally prolific marine reptiles that dominated the Mesozoic seas for over 70 million years. Their iconic body-plan incorporated an exceedingly long neck and small skull equipped with prominent intermeshing ‘fangs’. How this bizarre dental apparatus was employed in feeding is uncertain, but fossilized gut contents indicate a diverse diet of small pelagic vertebrates, cephalopods and epifaunal benthos. Here we report the first plesiosaurian tooth formation rates as a mechanism for servicing the functional dentition. Multiple dentine thin sections were taken through isolated elasmosaurid teeth from the Upper Cretaceous of Sweden. These specimens revealed an average of 950 daily incremental lines of von Ebner, and infer a remarkably protracted tooth formation cycle of about 2–3 years–other polyphyodont amniotes normally take ~1–2 years to form their teeth. Such delayed odontogenesis might reflect differences in crown length and function within an originally uneven tooth array. Indeed, slower replacement periodicity has been found to distinguish larger caniniform teeth in macrophagous pliosaurid plesiosaurians. However, the archetypal sauropterygian dental replacement system likely also imposed constraints via segregation of the developing tooth germs within discrete bony crypts; these partly resorbed to allow maturation of the replacement teeth within the primary alveoli after displacement of the functional crowns. Prolonged dental formation has otherwise been linked to tooth robustness and adaption for vigorous food processing. Conversely, elasmosaurids possessed narrow crowns with an elongate profile that denotes structural fragility. Their apparent predilection for easily subdued prey could thus have minimized this potential for damage, and was perhaps coupled with selective feeding strategies that ecologically optimized elasmosaurids towards more delicate middle trophic level aquatic predation.

Highlights

  • Plesiosaurians (Plesiosauria) were highly diverse Mesozoic marine amniotes whose fossil record extended over 135 million years

  • Tooth formation in elasmosaurid plesiosaurians famous pliosaurid Liopleurodon [1]), apparently specialized for enormous bite forces and hydrodynamic agility [2,3,4,5], to small-prey specialists epitomized by the Elasmosauridae, whose immensely long necks, typically diminutive heads and meshwork of slender ‘fang-like’ teeth (Fig 1A–1C) constitute one of the most extreme adaptive morphologies yet evidenced amongst aquatic vertebrates [7]

  • Our evidence for protracted tooth formation in dental remains attributed to the Late Cretaceous elasmosaurid Scanisaurus concurs with previous reports of extended dental replacement cycles in plesiosaurians and other more basal sauropterygians [18, 26,27,28]

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Summary

Introduction

Plesiosaurians (Plesiosauria) were highly diverse Mesozoic marine amniotes whose fossil record extended over 135 million years. Tooth formation in elasmosaurid plesiosaurians famous pliosaurid Liopleurodon [1]), apparently specialized for enormous bite forces and hydrodynamic agility [2,3,4,5], to small-prey specialists epitomized by the Elasmosauridae, whose immensely long necks, typically diminutive heads (ca 330 mm versus an eight metre maximum body length in Hydrotherosaurus [6]) and meshwork of slender ‘fang-like’ teeth (Fig 1A–1C) constitute one of the most extreme adaptive morphologies yet evidenced amongst aquatic vertebrates [7] The functionality of this bizarre feeding system has long been contested with contrasting hypotheses advocating ‘swan-like’ fishing with the head craned above the water [8], to ambush hunting of pelagic prey [8,9,10,11], and use of the teeth to aggressively stun [12], passively strain [13], or ‘graze’ along the sea floor [2, 14]. How this spectrum of prey was captured and processed is undetermined, but the characteristic dentition of elasmosaurids presumably played a primary role

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