(Redirected from Theropod)
'Theropods' ('beast feet') are a group of
bipedal saurischian dinosaurs. Although they were primarily carnivorous, a number of theropod families evolved
herbivory, during the
Cretaceous Period. Theropods first appear during the
Carnian age of the Late
Triassic about 220 million years ago (
MYA) and were the sole large terrestrial carnivores from the
Early Jurassic until the close of the
Cretaceous, about 65 MYA. Today, they are represented by the 9,300 living species of
birds, which evolved in the
Late Jurassic from small specialized
coelurosaurian dinosaurs.
Among the features linking theropods to birds are the three-toed foot, a
furcula (wishbone), air-filled bones and (in some cases) feathers and
brooding of the
eggs.
Evolutionary history
During the late
Triassic, a number of primitive proto-theropod and theropod dinosaurs existed and evolved alongside each other.
The earliest and most primitive of the carnivorous dinosaurs were ''
Eoraptor'' of
Argentina and the
herrerasaurs. The herrerasaurs existed from the early late Triassic (Late
Carnian to Early
Norian). They were found in
North America and
South America and possibly also
India and Southern
Africa. The herrerasaurs were characterised by a
mosaic of primitive and advanced features. Some paleontologists have in the past considered the herrerasaurians to be members of Theropoda, though they are now thought to be
basal saurischians, and may even have evolved prior to the saurischian-ornithischian split.

Theropod footprint
The earliest and most primitive unambiguous theropods (or alternatively,
Eutheropoda - 'True Theropods') are the
Coelophysidae. The
Coelophysidae (''
Coelophysis'', ''
Megapnosaurus'') were a group of widely distributed, lightly built and apparently gregarious animals. They included small hunters like ''Coelophysis'' and larger (6 meters) predators like ''
Dilophosaurus''. These successful animals continued from the Late Carnian (early Late Triassic) through to the
Toarcian (late
Early Jurassic). Although in the early
cladistic classifications they were included under the
Ceratosauria and considered a side-branch of more advanced theropods (e.g. Rowe & Gauthier 1990), they may have been ancestral to all other theropods (which would make them a
paraphyletic assemblage (e.g. Mortimer 2001, Carrano ''et al'' 2002).
The somewhat more advanced true
Ceratosauria (including ''
Ceratosaurus'' and ''
Carnotaurus'') appeared during the Early Jurassic and continued through to the Late Jurassic in
Laurasia. They competed quite well alongside their more advanced tetanuran relatives and - in the form of the
abelisaur lineage - lasted to the end of the Cretaceous in
Gondwana.
The
Tetanurae are more specialised again than the Ceratosaurs. They are subdivided into
Megalosauroidea (alternately
Spinosauroidea or
Torvosauroidea) and the
Avetheropoda. They were most common during the Middle Jurassic but continued to the Middle Cretaceous. The latter
clade - as their name indicates - were more closely related to birds and are again divided into the
Carnosauria (including ''
Allosaurus'') and the
Coelurosauria, a very large and diverse dinosaur group that was especially common during the Cretaceous.
Thus, during the late Jurassic, there were no fewer than four distinct lineages of theropods - ceratosaurs, megalosaurs, carnosaurs, and coelurosaurs - preying on the abundance of small and large herbivorous dinosaurs. All four groups survived into the Cretaceous, although only two - the abelisaurs and the coelurosaurs - seem to have made it to end of the period, where they were geographically separate, the abelisaurs in Gondwana, and the coelurosaurs in
Asiamerica.
Of all the theropod groups, the coelurosaurs were by far the most diverse. Some coelurosaur clades that flourished during the Cretaceous are:
tyrannosaurs, including the famous ''
Tyrannosaurus rex'', the
dromaeosaurs, including ''
Velociraptor'' and ''
Deinonychus'', which are remarkably similar in form to the oldest known bird, ''
Archaeopteryx'' (Ostrom 1969, Paul 1988, Dingus & Rowe 1998), as well as the dromaeosaur-like
Troodontidae, the omnivorous
oviraptorosaurs, the omnivorous
ornithomimids ("ostrich dinosaurs") and
Therizinosauridae (giant-clawed herbivores) and the
birds (the only dinosaur lineage to survive the end Cretaceous mass-extinction). While the roots of these various groups must have been in the Late or possibly even the Middle Jurassic, they only became abundant during the early Cretaceous. A few paleontologists, such as
Gregory S. Paul, have suggested (Paul 1988, 2002) that some or all of these advanced theropods were actually descended from flying dinosaurs or proto-birds like ''Archaeopteryx'' that lost the ability to fly and returned to a terrestrial habitat. While this hypothesis can explain why coelurosaurs are so rare during the Jurassic, more fossil evidence is needed before the exact relationships of advanced theropods can be accurately tested.
Systematics
Taxonomy
★ 'Suborder Theropoda'
★
★ ''
Agnosphitys''
★
★ ''
Chindesaurus''
★
★ ''
Guaibasaurus''
★
★ 'Infraorder
Ceratosauria'
★
★
★ Family
Ceratosauridae
★
★
★ Superfamily
Abelisauroidea
★
★
★ Superfamily
Coelophysoidea
★
★ 'Clade
Tetanurae'
★
★
★ Superfamily
Spinosauroidea
★
★
★ 'Infraorder
Carnosauria'
★
★
★
★ Superfamily
Allosauroidea
★
★
★ 'Clade
Coelurosauria'
★
★
★
★ Family
Coeluridae
★
★
★
★ Family
Compsognathidae
★
★
★
★ Superfamily
Tyrannosauroidea
★
★
★
★ 'Infraorder
Ornithomimosauria'
★
★
★
★ 'Clade
Maniraptora'
★
★
★
★
★ Family
Scansoriopterygidae
★
★
★
★
★ 'Superfamily
Therizinosauroidea
★
★
★
★
★ 'Infraorder '
Deinonychosauria'
★
★
★
★
★
★ Family
Dromaeosauridae
★
★
★
★
★
★ Family
Troodontidae
★
★
★
★
★ 'Infraorder
Oviraptorosauria'
Phylogeny
The following
cladogram is adapted from Weishampel ''et al.'', 2004.
[1]
The largest theropods
''
Tyrannosaurus'' was the largest and most popular theropod known to the general public for many decades. Since its discovery, however, a number of other giant carnivorous dinosaurs have been described, including ''
Spinosaurus'', ''
Carcharodontosaurus'', ''
Giganotosaurus'', ''
Tyrannotitan'' and ''
Mapusaurus''. In the film ''
Jurassic Park 3'', ''
Spinosaurus'' is depicted as being larger than ''Tyrannosaurus'' and the original ''Spinosaurus'' specimens (as well as new fossils described in 2006) support this, showing that ''Spinosaurus'' was possibly 6 meters longer and at least 1 or more metric tons heavier than ''Tyrannosaurus'' (a size comparison of the largest theropods can be found in the article
Dinosaur size). There is still no clear scientific explanation for exactly why these animals grew so much larger than the predators that came before and after them. Parallel to this, the smallest known theropod is the humming bird.
References
1. Weishampel, David B.; Dodson, Peter; Osmólska, Halszka (eds.) (2004). ''The Dinosauria'', Second Edition. University of California Press., 861 pp.
★ Carrano, M. T., Sampson, S. D. & Forster, C. A., (2002), The osteology of ''Masiakasaurus knopfleri'', a small abelisauroid (Dinosauria: Theropoda) from the Late Cretaceous of Madagascar. ''Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology'' Vol. 22, #3, pp. 510-534
★ Dingus, L. & Rowe, T. (1998), ''The Mistaken Extinction: Dinosaur Evolution and the Origin of Birds'', Freeman
★
Kirkland, J. I., Zanno, L. E., Sampson, S. D., Clark, J. M. & DeBlieux, D. D., (2005) A primitive therizinosauroid dinosaurs from the Early Cretaceous of Utah, Nature: Vol. 435, pp. 84-87
★ Mortimer, M., (2001) "
Rauhut's Thesis", Dinosaur Mailing List Archives, 4 Jul 2001
★ Ostrom, J.H. (1969). Osteology of Deinonychus antirrhopus, an unusual theropod from the Lower Cretaceous of Montana, ''Peabody Museum Nat. History Bull.'', 30, 1-165
★ Paul, G.S., (1988) ''Predatory Dinosaurs of the World'' Simon and Schuster Co., New York (ISBN 0-671-61946-2)
★ ----- (2002) ''Dinosaurs of the Air'' (ISBN 0-8018-6763-0):
★ Rowe, T., & Gauthier, J., (1990) Ceratosauria. 151-168 in Weishampel, D. B., Dodson, P., & Osmólska, H. (eds.), ''The Dinosauria'', University of California Press, Berkley, Los Angeles, Oxford.