Abstract

Definitive therizinosaurid cranial materials are exceptionally rare, represented solely by an isolated braincase and tooth in the North American taxon Nothronychus mckinleyi, the remarkably complete skull of the Asian taxon Erlikosaurus andrewsi, and the lower hemimandibles of Segnosaurus galbinensis. To date, comprehensive descriptions of the former taxa are published; however, the mandibular materials of S. galbinensis have remained largely understudied since their initial description in 1979. Here we provide a comprehensive description of the well-preserved hemimandibles and dentition of S. galbinensis (MPC-D 100/80), from the Upper Cretaceous Bayanshiree Formation, Gobi Desert, Mongolia. The subrectangular and ventrally displaced caudal hemimandible, extreme ventral deflection of the rostral dentary, and edentulism of the caudal dentary of S. galbinensis are currently apomorphic among therizinosaurians. Unique, unreported dental traits including lingually folded mesial carinae, development of a denticulated triangular facet on the distal carinae near the cervix, and extracarinal accessory denticles, suggest a highly specialized feeding strategy in S. galbinensis. The presence of triple carinae on the distalmost lateral tooth crowns is also unique, although may represent an abnormality. Contrasted with the simplistic dentition of the contemporaneous therizinosaurid E. andrewsi, the dentition of S. galbinensis is indicative of niche partitioning in food acquisition, processing, or resources among known therizinosaurids inhabiting Asian ecosystems in the Late Cretaceous. Although not quantitatively correlated with diet, this suite of specializations is otherwise unique among theropod dinosaurs and supports derived inferences of facultative or obligate herbivory in therizinosaurids, ultimately adding novel information to our understanding of ecomorphology in theropods.

Highlights

  • Therizinosaurians exhibit a highly unusual bauplan among theropod dinosaurs, a condition that precluded even a rudimentary understanding of their evolutionary relationships for decades (Maleev, 1954; Rozhdestvensky, 1970; Paul, 1984; Gauthier, 1986; Sereno, 1989; Russell & Dong, 1993; Xu, Tang & Wang, 1999)

  • Two hemimandibles are preserved among the holotype materials of S. galbinensis (MPC-D 100/80) (Figs. 1A and 1B)

  • We note that following features add novel character information that may be of phylogenetic utility to evolutionary studies of therizinosaurians and theropods more generally

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Summary

Introduction

Therizinosaurians exhibit a highly unusual bauplan among theropod dinosaurs, a condition that precluded even a rudimentary understanding of their evolutionary relationships for decades (Maleev, 1954; Rozhdestvensky, 1970; Paul, 1984; Gauthier, 1986; Sereno, 1989; Russell & Dong, 1993; Xu, Tang & Wang, 1999) Chief among their anatomical oddities are specializations of the mandible and dentition analogous with those of herbivorous dinosaurs that have since been quantitatively correlated with diet (Zanno et al, 2009; Zanno & Makovicky, 2011). Brief descriptions of the dentition of Neimongosaurus yangi, E. andrewsi, S. galbinensis, and a single isolated, poorly preserved tooth associated with Nothronychus mckinleyi are published (Kirkland & Wolfe, 2001; Clark, Maryanska & Barsbold, 2004; Hedrick et al, 2015); detailed study and adequate figures are lacking for all but E. andrewsi (Clark, Perle & Norell, 1994; Lautenschlager et al, 2014) and No mckinleyi (Hedrick et al, 2015)

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