Skip to player
Skip to main content
Skip to footer
Search
Connect
Watch fullscreen
Like
Comments
Bookmark
Share
Add to Playlist
Report
Did Dreadnoughtus Really Have Air Sacs?
Live Science
Follow
2/14/2025
Beloved sauropod Dreadnoughtus is featured in the Apple TV+ show PREHISTORIC PLANET, episode 2 "Deserts." Paleontologist Dr. Kenneth Lacovara discusses their presentation and how accurate the dinosaurs were depicted.
Category
🤖
Tech
Transcript
Display full video transcript
00:00
It was quite a long scene of Dreadnoughtus.
00:03
Here they are.
00:05
A fight scene.
00:06
It was a fight scene in this territorial battle
00:11
between males.
00:12
And I think this was actually kind of based on our science,
00:16
because what we found with the two Dreadnoughtus individuals
00:20
is that the much larger one, the 65-ton one,
00:24
was osteologically, that means its bones,
00:26
was osteologically quite young.
00:29
You might even think of it as a teenager
00:31
who was growing rapidly at the time of its death.
00:34
Whereas the one that we found that was one-third smaller,
00:38
osteologically, was much, much older.
00:41
And so where do you find this in animals today?
00:43
Where you find older, smaller individuals
00:46
and younger, bigger individuals?
00:47
That's in species where you have sexual dimorphism,
00:51
where the two sexes are of different sizes.
00:55
And usually that happens
00:56
where you have male-dominated sexual selection,
00:59
which means that two alpha males
01:01
are going to compete with each other
01:03
to control a territory or a group of females.
01:06
There's also female-dominated sexual selection.
01:09
That's where you see the males showing off
01:11
with all kinds of colors and doing fancy tricks
01:14
and buying Corvettes and things like that.
01:17
And so with Dreadnoughtus, we have just a hint
01:21
that we have sexual dimorphism.
01:24
And then kind of a hint, based on a hint
01:27
that maybe it was male-dominated sexual selection.
01:30
And that's what you are seeing here.
01:32
And then-
01:33
These air sacs, we gotta talk about these air sacs.
01:35
Yeah, let's talk about the air sacs.
01:36
What do you think about that?
01:37
Well, the air sacs are kind of hard to miss.
01:41
I have to tell you that there is zero evidence
01:43
that Dreadnoughtus had air sacs.
01:46
These are pneumatic gular pouches
01:49
like a grouse would have today.
01:51
Is it impossible?
01:53
No, it's not impossible,
01:55
but we don't have any evidence that we've had that.
01:58
Now, I was told by the consultant on the show
02:02
that they wanted to find a way to illustrate the fact
02:07
that extinct animals must have had
02:09
amazing soft tissue structures
02:12
that will never be preserved in the fossil record,
02:14
which is certainly true.
02:15
If we only knew elephants from their skeletons,
02:18
I probably wouldn't really know what an elephant looked like.
02:22
So this is an example of a hypothetical feature
02:26
that maybe we're missing completely in the fossil record
02:29
that could have existed.
02:31
Did they specifically have this?
02:33
Probably not.
02:34
Is it impossible that they had this?
02:36
No, it's also not,
02:38
but we don't have any evidence of it.
02:40
What we do have though,
02:41
is we have their cervical vertebrae,
02:43
cervical vertebrae.
02:45
And the cervical vertebrae are very pneumatic,
02:48
meaning that they have a system of air tubes
02:52
and air bladders that invade the bone
02:55
over the lifetime of the animal.
02:56
So the bone becomes more honeycombed with air over time,
03:00
making it very light,
03:01
but still retaining most of the strength.
03:03
Because if you have a 40 foot long neck,
03:06
a 40 foot long lever,
03:07
you don't wanna put a lot of weight
03:09
at the end of that lever.
03:10
So they have these very lightly built pneumatic necks,
03:14
which I guess gave them the idea,
03:15
okay, there's air in the neck,
03:17
there's a lot of air in the neck.
03:19
Why not something like male grouses in the breeding season
03:23
that have these pneumatic cooler pouches
03:25
that pop out like that?
03:27
Thinking of a story of Dreadnoughtus.
03:31
I know, it's always interesting to draw inspiration
03:34
from modern creatures.
03:36
There he goes.
03:37
But I guess we'll have to hold out
03:39
for any more fossil or soft tissue preservation.
03:43
Yeah, there's certain things
03:44
that we're just never going to know,
03:46
and we kind of have to live with that disappointment.
03:50
But there are a lot of soft tissue features
03:52
that extinct creatures have
03:53
that we're just never going to find.
03:56
We can make inferences about them.
03:57
Sometimes we can do that from molecular work
04:01
with modern creatures.
04:02
We can look at the DNA from groups of related creatures
04:06
and kind of figure out where that trait must have started.
04:10
Occasionally you get soft tissue structures preserved
04:15
if you have very clay deposits
04:19
that can preserve that kind of resolution,
04:21
but that's very rare.
04:21
And I don't see that scenario happening
04:23
for big things like sauropods.
04:25
That happens for little things like birds.
04:28
And then there's always the promise
04:30
of molecular paleontology,
04:31
where we routinely cover now,
04:34
recover blood vessels and blood cells
04:37
and proteins from dinosaurs and other extinct creatures.
04:41
A few DNA bases have been recovered.
04:43
Is it possible we'll have
04:45
a genome of a dinosaur,
04:46
an Atlanavian dinosaur in the future?
04:50
I don't know.
04:50
It's a pretty high mountain to climb,
04:52
but I can't say that it's impossible.
Recommended
0:47
|
Up next
Most Massive Planet Known To Orbit A Low-Mass Star Has Been Found
Space.com
today
1:47
Understanding Qualified Charitable Distribution (QCD)?
Kiplinger
today
12:55
Private Cygnus Cargo Ship Captured By Space Station Robotic Arm
Space.com
yesterday
2:25
ULA Vulcan Rocket's 2nd Certification Flight - Explained With Launch Animation
Space.com
yesterday
3:49
What Is A College 529 Savings Plan - How Does It Work?
Kiplinger
yesterday
3:33
Should You Delay Your Social Security And Use Your 401K?
Kiplinger
yesterday
3:58
Ace's Masterclasses Guitar Tracking Tips
Music Radar
yesterday
5:37
Arpeggiator Functions Of The Novation Launchkey Mini Mk3
Music Radar
yesterday
2:26
10 Greatest Synth Icons
Music Radar
2 days ago
1:52
Vikings May Not Have Been Who We Thought They Were: Tall, Blonde, Or Scandinavian
Live Science
today
1:36
The Therapeutic Skin-Care Routine of Dolphins
Live Science
today
0:47
Super-Strong Magnet Literally Blew The Doors Off A Tokyo Laboratory
Live Science
yesterday
5:20
The James Webb Telescope Images Explained
Live Science
yesterday
1:19
Amazing James Webb Space Telescope Images
Live Science
yesterday
1:41
How Far Away Is Lightning?
Live Science
yesterday
2:17
Stunningly Preserved Time Capsule Ship Found
Live Science
yesterday
2:18
What Makes a Cannibal Coronal Mass Ejection
Live Science
yesterday
1:27
Should You Release House Spiders Outdoors?
Live Science
yesterday
9:40
Those Beautiful Auroras Were From A Major Solar Flare
Live Science
yesterday
4:15
Which Animals Will Survive Climate Change
Live Science
yesterday
1:23
It’s A Snake Eat Snake World Out There
Live Science
yesterday
3:10
What Is Type 3 Diabetes?
Live Science
yesterday
2:56
NASA's Artemis Program
Live Science
2 days ago
2:21
Which Vitamins Boost The Immune System?
Live Science
2 days ago
2:24
Ice Age Rock Art Discovered Hidden In Amazon Rainforest
Live Science
2 days ago