Monday, April 12, 2010

Psittacosaurus' Got Color

The integument of Psittacosaurus from Liaoning Province, China: taphonomy, epidermal patterns and color of a ceratopsian dinosaur

1. Theagarten Lingham-Soliar (A, 1)
2. Gerhard Plodowski (B)

A. Biological and Conservation Sciences, Biological Sciences Building, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Westville Campus, P. Bag X54001, Durban, South Africa

B. Forschungsinstitut Senckenberg, Senckenberganlage 25, 60325 Frankfurt am Main, Germany


1. Email: linghamst@ukzn.ac.za

Abstract:

Preserved skin of small dinosaurs is rare. Here, a specimen of the ceratopsian dinosaur, Psittacosaurus, presents some of the best preserved epidermal scales observed to date in a relatively small dinosaur, over wide areas extending from the head to the tail. We study the preserved epidermis of SMF R 4970, the different types of scales, color, and patterns, and their respective locations in the body. We use modern application of high-power digital imaging for close-up analysis of the tubercles and fragments of preserved color. Three types of scales are preserved, large plate-like scales, smaller polygonal scales or tubercles, and round pebble-like scales. The sizes of the plate-like scales vary in different parts of the body and vanish altogether posteriorly. Light and dark cryptic patterns are created by the associations of the tubercle and plate-like scales, and there is also evidence of countershading in the proximal caudal region, the body darker dorsally and lighter ventrally. Perhaps most impressive are the distinctive pigmented impressions of scales over most of the skeletal elements. The pigmentation follows the curvature of the bones implying that when it was deposited, the skin was still pliable and able to wrap around the visible parts of the elements. The present record of color is the first in a non-theropod dinosaur and only the second record in a non-avian dinosaur. Because of its resistance to degradation and ability to produce various color tones from yellows to blacks, we suggest that melanin was the dominant chemical involved in the coloration of Psittacosaurus. The data here enable us to reconstruct the colors of Psittacosaurus as predominantly black and amber/brown, in cryptic patterns, somewhat dull, but useful to a prey animal. Indeed, skin pigment within a partially degraded bone indicates that Psittacosaurus was scavenged shortly after death. The theropod dinosaur Sinosauropteryx has recently been reported to have naturally pigmented integumental structures, which the authors interpret as proof that they are protofeathers and not support fibers of collagen. Our findings in Psittacosaurus, on the other hand, indicate a more parsimonious and less profound alternative explanation, i.e., decomposition of the skin releases pigments that readily permeate underlying structures.


Now...Zach...what was that about not getting ceratopsian colors? ;)

2 comments:

Dicing with Dragons said...

I think Zach might say this paper draws some rather suspect conclusions, specifically, "It's brown. Because the rock we found it in is brown." I'd agree with him.

Also, they couldn't find a herbivore with colors comparable to what they proposed? Weird.

Zach said...

It's a terrible paper based on two very suspect premises:

1) All the fatty tissue between the bones and the skin (as though there is no muscle) disappeared magically, thus the skin was appressed against the bones, perfectly preserved, or whatever.

2) The pigment "bled" onto the surrounding bone and matrix.

You can pretty much ignore this paper, Will.