Abstract

Here we describe a new theropod, Bicentenaria argentina nov. gen. et nov. sp., from the early Late Cretaceous of Patagonia. It is represented by more than a hundred bones belonging to different sized individuals, which were buried together in disarticulation after little transportation. The available association of skeletal elements suggests a gregarious behaviour for Bicentenaria , an ethological trait also recorded among other theropod clades. Increasing documentation of monospecific assemblages of different groups of theropods suggests that a gregarious ehaviour may have constituted the ancestral condition for Theropoda, at least. Bicentenaria characterizes for the surangular bone with a high dorsal margin and a prominent lateral shelf, a retroarticular process that is low, wide and spoon-shaped, and quadrate bone with its lateral condyle larger than the medial one. Phylogenetic analysis found the Chinese Tugulusaurus and the atagonian Bicentenaria as successive sister taxa of all other coelurosaurs, thus revealing the importance of the new taxon in the understanding of the early diversification of Coelurosauria. In particular, Bicentenaria amplifies the array of basal coelurosaurs that inhabited Gondwana during the Cretaceous, also including compsognathids, Aniksosaurus and Santanaraptor. Although still restricted to a handful of forms, available information indicates that Gondwana was a cradle for the evolution of different lineages of basal coelurosaurs, different from those documented in Upper Cretaceous beds in the northern landmasses. Analysis of body size distribution in averostran theropods results in the identification of two main episodes of drastic size reduction in the evolutionary history of Coelurosauria: one occurred at the initial radiation of the group (as represented by Bicentenaria, Zuolong, Tugulusaurus, compsognathids, and Aniksosaurus), and a second episode occurred at the early diverification of Paraves or avialans. Reduction in body size may have allowed adult coelurosaurians to exploit ecological niches not occupied before by larger basal averostrans.

Highlights

  • MATERIALS AND METHODSCoelurosauria includes extant birds and all theropods sharing a more recent common ancestor with Passer domesticus than with Allosaurus fragilis (Holtz et al, 2004)

  • Most of these clades are well documented in the Northern Hemisphere, and the record of Coelurosauria in the southern landmasses is still limited, discoveries produced in Patagonia in the last 15 years have favourably changed this situation (Novas, 2009)

  • The fossil record of non-maniraptoran coelurosaurs in Gondwana is currently composed by Mirischia asymmetrica (Santana Formation, Aptian, Brazil; Naish et al, 2004) and Nqwebasaurus thwazi

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Summary

MATERIALS AND METHODS

Coelurosauria includes extant birds and all theropods sharing a more recent common ancestor with Passer domesticus than with Allosaurus fragilis (Holtz et al, 2004). A large portion of a right pubic shaft is available, which preserves the base of the pubic tubercle (i.e., the ambiens process) and resembles the condition observed in many other theropods (e.g., Sinraptor, Allosaurus, Gallimimus, Aerosteon; Osmólska et al, 1972; Madsen, 1976; Currie & Zhao, 1993; Sereno et al, 2008). The medial flange of the pubic shaft (the pubic apron) originates as a low but sharp ridge on the caudo-medial margin of pubis, at level of the ambiens process This flange becomes much more prominent cranially and distally, resembling the condition of Allosaurus (Madsen, 1976). The pedal ungual phalanges are acute and poorly curved, with subtriangular proximal ends (Fig. 5)

DISCUSSION
CONCLUSIONS
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