Abstract

BackgroundRhabdodontid ornithopod dinosaurs are characteristic elements of Late Cretaceous European vertebrate faunas and were previously collected from lower Campanian to Maastrichtian continental deposits. Phylogenetic analyses have placed rhabdodontids among basal ornithopods as the sister taxon to the clade consisting of Tenontosaurus, Dryosaurus, Camptosaurus, and Iguanodon. Recent studies considered Zalmoxes, the best known representative of the clade, to be significantly smaller than closely related ornithopods such as Tenontosaurus, Camptosaurus, or Rhabdodon, and concluded that it was probably an island dwarf that inhabited the Maastrichtian Haţeg Island.Methodology/Principal FindingsRhabdodontid remains from the Santonian of western Hungary provide evidence for a new, small-bodied form, which we assign to Mochlodon vorosi n. sp. The new species is most similar to the early Campanian M. suessi from Austria, and the close affinities of the two species is further supported by the results of a global phylogenetic analysis of ornithischian dinosaurs. Bone histological studies of representatives of all rhabdodontids indicate a similar adult body length of 1.6–1.8 m in the Hungarian and Austrian species, 2.4–2.5 m in the subadults of both Zalmoxes robustus and Z. shqiperorum and a much larger, 5–6 m adult body length in Rhabdodon. Phylogenetic mapping of femoral lengths onto the results of the phylogenetic analysis suggests a femoral length of around 340 mm as the ancestral state for Rhabdodontidae, close to the adult femoral lengths known for Zalmoxes (320–333 mm).Conclusions/SignificanceOur analysis of body size evolution does not support the hypothesis of autapomorhic nanism for Zalmoxes. However, Rhabdodon is reconstructed as having undergone autapomorphic giantism and the reconstructed small femoral length (245 mm) of Mochlodon is consistent with a reduction in size relative to the ancestral rhabdodontid condition. Our results imply a pre-Santonian divergence between western and eastern rhabdodontid lineages within the western Tethyan archipelago.

Highlights

  • Rhabdodontidae is a group of ornithopod dinosaurs endemic to the Late Cretaceous of Europe that has previously been considered to include two valid genera, each containing two species, known from several geographic regions ([1], Figure 1)

  • Based on autapomorphic features of the dentary, we here resurrect the generic name Mochlodon for the Austrian and Hungarian (Santonian) material, but distinguish two different species based upon osteological differences of the dentaries

  • The clade includes six species referred to three genera: Rhabdodon priscus and R. septimanicus, Mochlodon suessi and M. vorosi, and Zalmoxes robustus and Z. shqiperorum

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Summary

Introduction

Rhabdodontidae is a group of ornithopod dinosaurs endemic to the Late Cretaceous of Europe that has previously been considered to include two valid genera, each containing two species, known from several geographic regions ([1], Figure 1). The first member of the group to be discovered, was unearthed close to Marseille, southern France, in the late 1840s [2], and was described by Matheron [3]. Recent studies considered Zalmoxes, the best known representative of the clade, to be significantly smaller than closely related ornithopods such as Tenontosaurus, Camptosaurus, or Rhabdodon, and concluded that it was probably an island dwarf that inhabited the Maastrichtian Hateg Island

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