Seeing lots of love for Mononykus in #PrehistoricPlanet, including from producers @Jon_Favreau and @MikeGunton. Mononykus was part of a group called the alvarezsaurs, and as someone who has adopted one as my username for years, I was very impressed by its portrayal! Here's why...
Alvarezsaurs were a group of small theropod dinosaurs, mostly pigeon- to turkey-sized. They were pretty closely related to birds (but not as close as, say, Velociraptor) and one species has been preserved with remains of a feathery coat. #PrehistoricPlanet (📷@skeletaldrawing)
One of the strangest features of Late Cretaceous alvarezsaurs were their forelimbs: extremely short and stout, with stiffened joints to avoid dislocation, HUGE attachments for muscles that pull towards the body, and a single enlarged claw. #PrehistoricPlanet (📷Perle et al.)
We only see this set of traits in animals that hunt for social insects by using their forelimbs to tear open hard substrates: anteaters (pictured), pangolins, and some armadillos. So this is also our best guess for how alvarezsaurs fed. #PrehistoricPlanet (📷@PTPritchard et al.)
In #PrehistoricPlanet, Mononykus digs up termites from dead wood, not a termite mound. Traces of wood-nesting termites are common in some Cretaceous deposits, whereas it is disputed whether mound-building termites were present in the Mesozoic at all. (📷Joe Kunkel)
Termite-eaters also often have a long tongue. A tongue skeleton (“hyo” in picture) is preserved in one alvarezsaur specimen and reported to be “well-developed”. A toothless tip of the lower jaw may have allowed a long tongue to protrude. #PrehistoricPlanet (📷@ChiappeLuis et al.)
Alvarezsaurs had very long legs for their size, which probably helped them not only escape predators, but also travel efficiently for long distances. And as mentioned on #PrehistoricPlanet, alvarezsaurs may have traveled a lot, for insect colonies can be very widely dispersed.
The newest alvarezsaur discovery shown in #PrehistoricPlanet is their great hearing! A study last year found they had similar inner ear structure to barn owls, which hunt by ear. Some modern termite-eaters like the bat-eared fox listen for prey, too. (📷@jonahchoiniere et al.)
Alvarezsaurs were previously featured on Chased by Dinosaurs (2002) and Dinosaur Planet (2003), but neither truly highlighted how amazing they were. I couldn’t be more pleased with their depiction in #PrehistoricPlanet, and the fact so many viewers are now enamored by them!
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#TetZooCon @Dave_Hone on uncovering dinosaur behavior and his new book of the same name
#TetZooCon @Dave_Hone: In studying extinct animal behavior, inferences based on multiple lines of evidence are the strongest. For example, spinosaurids are thought to be fish eaters based on biomechanical modeling, tooth structure, preserved gut contents, and isotopic evidence.
#TetZooCon @Dave_Hone: We need to consider what is habitual behavior, what is probable behavior, what might have happened rarely, and what is unlikely. Crocodylians can climb trees and proboscis monkeys are habitual swimmers, but this would be hard to determine from skeletons.