Dinosaur nesting research at the U of C shows similarities to birds - Action News
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Dinosaur nesting research at the U of C shows similarities to birds

Birds may have learned a thing or two about nesting from dinosaurs, according to new research at the University of Calgary.

More advanced dinosaurs moved from burying eggs to open nests

PhD Student Kohei Tanaka holds a tiny piece of dinosaur shell. (CBC)

Birds may have learned a thing or two about nesting from dinosaurs, according to new research at the University of Calgary.

PhD student KoheiTanaka recently published a paper where he compared the fossilized eggsof 30 different dinosaurs, to the eggs of 120 species of birds and crocodiles.

"We found that relatively primitive dinosaurs buried their eggs in the ground for incubation, like modern crocodiles"Tanaka said. "Whereas eggs were exposed in the nests of more advanced dinosaurs that are closely related to birds."

The soft shells of primitive dinosaurs, like long-necked sauropods, indicate they were buried in the ground.

The eggs of more advanced, bird-like dinosaurs had hard shells, and that means the mother likely used an open nest and kept the eggs warm with her belly.

Tanakaand his co-authors concludethere was probably a shift in the type of nests dinosaurs usedas they evolved into modern birds.

These dinosaur shells are being studied at the University of Calgary. (CBC)

"We'd like to know how nesting behaviour, or styles of nesting, changed through evolutionfrom reptiles, to dinosaurs, and finally birds," Tanaka said.

Tanaka says there is still a lot to learn about nesting habits, but this is a positive step.

Open nesting essential for survival

Tanakaworked under the supervision ofDarlaZelenitsky, an Assistant Professor at the University of Calgary.

"Because buried nests needed to be built and incubated on the ground, open nesting and brooding may have allowed advanced theropods - including birds - to incubate eggs in a greater diversity of locations and occasionally away from ground predators, potentially contributing to their evolutionary success,"Zelenitsky said.