Lufengosaurus huenei: Jurassic Dinosaur Diagnosed With Bone Disease

Saturday, March 24, 2018

Reconstruction of the bite wound affecting the shoulder of our herbivorous dinosaur. Zongda Zhang/Lida Xing, CC BY-SA

A 200 million year old sauropod has been diagnosed with osteomyelitis, a severe bone disease, according to a scientific paper published on Thursday.

Scientists from China, the United States, Britain and South Africa said study of a Jurassic Lufengosaurus fossil from Lufeng Dinosaur Museum in southwest China's Yunnan Province, suggests it may have had a serious bone infection.

The findings were published on Scientific Reports, an online open-access scientific journal.

Map showing the location of the dinosaur fossil discovery. Lida Xing

 

When the dinosaur was excavated in 1997, there was a pathological abnormality on one of its right ribs. A small hole penetrates almost halfway through the rib, said the museum's Wang Yi.

"The rim of the penetration is quite smooth, so it is more likely to be caused by some kind of disease, rather than any injury," said paleontologist Xing Lida, lead researcher of the team.

According to Xing, traditional bone pathology involves low powered magnification of the bone, but this only shows the external surface of the fossil.

"In the case of this rib, the lesion penetrates deep into the bone, so we needed to find a way to see the internal structure before diagnosis," Xing said.

The pathological rib of Lufengosaurus, showing the removal of a large area of bone. Lida Xing

 

Now, 20 years after the dinosaur's discovery, X-ray micro-computed tomography (micro-CT) can image the deep structures and reconstruct the cellular structure of the rib.

"From micro-CT scanning and reconstruction, we can tell this Lufengosaurus was attacked by a predator and the bite caused osteomyelitis which took its life. It must have suffered a lot before death," said Ran Hao, researcher at the Chinese Academy of Sciences Kunming institute of zoology.

"This is the first time that China has found such pathological changes in sauropod dinosaurs. This exciting discovery will aid understanding of how osteomyelitis originated and evolved,"said Xing.

Micro-computed tomography allowed us to produce surface renderings of the fossil in 3D (top row) and 2D X-ray slices through the rib (bottom row). These show areas of cellular reorganisation, bone destruction and bone formation indicative of ostemyelitis. Patrick Randolph-Quinney, UCLan

This is only the second case of osteomyelitis in a sauropod in the fossil record. The other case comes from a giant titanosaur from Argentina with a bacterial infection of the spine.

Lufengosaurus was a herbivore, with a long neck and a small head. At least 16 Early Jurassic dinosaur species have been named after Lufeng and its neighboring area since paleontologist Yang Zhongjian published a paper on Lufengosaurus huenei in 1941.

The recent work highlights how the use of micro-CT is revolutionizing the study of the fossil record.

"This finding can provide critical insight into palaeo-immunology, behavioral and life history information for dinosaurs, as well as environmental insights into ancient ecosystems," Xing said.

Source: www.xinhuanet.com