New research out of Northern Ireland reveals there may be a distinct clue to determine the actual gender of dinosaurs.

It’s not pretty.

Paleontologists have been trying to identify female and male dinosaurs for decades, but it is very difficult to determine.

Now Queen’s University Belfast has uncovered a clue.

Researchers have been working as part of an international team of paleontologists to study one of the most successful groups of dinosaurs, the herbivorous hadrosaurs.

Using statistics and computer simulation, they have found that a common pattern of bone fractures at the dinosaurs’ tail were likely caused during mating, where the male dinosaur crushed the backbones of the female.

Ouch.

The study

Filippo Bertozzo began studying duckbill dinosaur pathologies for his doctoral degree at Queen’s. He now works at the Institute of Natural History in Brussels and has published these new findings in the journal iScience — the paper is co-authored with professors Eileen Murphy, Gareth Arnott and Alastair Ruffell.

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In 2019, during a research visit to Blagoveschensk, Russia, Bertozzo was studying a large hadrosaurid with an ornate fancy head crest, Olorotitan arharensis. He noticed that many of the Olorotitan’s tail vertebrae showed healed fractures on their spines.

“I was puzzled by the observation. I have seen this pattern in other similar species, but only in isolated vertebrae. Here, the fractures were visibly concentrated in the vertebrae at the upper end of the tail, without extending down to its tip,” Bertozzo said.

Since 1979, Canadian paleontologist Darren H. Tanke has been collecting hadrosaurid remains from Dinosaur Provincial Park in Alberta, Canada. He also discovered several injured caudal tail vertebrae and in 1989 formulated an explanation for the pattern.

However, his observation was based on a limited number of specimens and species, all from North America. Even though it was fascinating, the hypothesis could not stand up to scientific scrutiny at the time.

The game-changer

That was until 2019 when Bertozzo contacted him and invited him to collaborate on the project.

The new study is based on about 500 pathological tail vertebrae from different hadrosaur species from North America, Europe and Russia.

The collaboration produced interesting results.

The appearance of the backbone injuries is strikingly similar between species, showing a vertical-to-oblique injury, likely caused by vertical pressure having been placed on the tip of the vertebral spinous process.

However, these injuries were not fatal as many specimens have injuries with signs of healing. In some cases, the bones even displayed evidence of a second injury indicating repeated encounters.

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Professor Gareth Arnott from Queen’s provided expertise on animal behavior drawing comparisons on that behavior observed in modern species with that likely occurring in dinosaur ancestors.

He had this to say: “Aggressively pursuing a female during reproduction might sound evolutionary disadvantageous for the continuation of the species but we already witness similar occurrences in many modern species, such as in sea lions, turtles, and some species of birds. Reproductive competition is one of the most complicated topics in animal biology, especially for extinct species.”

It is an intriguing question about these mating habits, but it provides us better information as the world continues to evolve.

Bertozzo adds: “If the mating hypothesis is correct, we can infer that an individual with the injuries is female. This will be a game changer since it will enable other questions to be answered about differences between male and female dinosaurs.”

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