Iridescent plumage in a juvenile dromaeosaurid theropod dinosaur

Angus D. Croudace, Caizhi Shen, Junchang Lü, Stephen L. Brusatte, Jakob Vinther

Research output: Contribution to journalReview article (Academic Journal)peer-review

Abstract

Colour reconstructions have provided new insights into the lives of dinosaurs and other extinct animals, by predicting colouration patterns from fossilised pigment-bearing organelles called melanosomes. Although these methods have become increasingly popular, only a small number of dinosaurs have been studied using these techniques, which require exceptional preservation of fossil feathers, leaving open key questions such as whether dinosaurs changed their plumage patterns during ontogeny. Here we reconstruct the feather colouration of an approximately one-year-old individual of the Early Cretaceous dromaeosaurid theropod Wulong bohaiensis, which to our knowledge is the first unequivocal juvenile paravian for which aspects of the original colour has been predicted. Using quadratic discriminant analysis (QDA) and multinomial logistic regression (MLR) on the most comprehensive available datasets, we find strong evidence for iridescent plumage of the forelimb and hindlimb remiges and grey plumage on other portions of the body. This suggests that some juvenile paravians used shiny iridescent feathers for signalling purposes, possibly even before reaching somatic or sexual maturity, and thus we can conclude that this paravian used iridescent signalling for intraspecific communication other than sexual signalling. Finally, our results show that when analysing fossil datasets that are entirely comprised of solid and cylindrical melanosomes QDA consistently outperforms MLR, providing more accurate and higher classification probability colour predictions.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)213-225
Number of pages13
JournalActa Palaeontologica Polonica
Volume68
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 13 Jun 2023

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
SEM work was funded by a bursary awarded through the University of Edinburgh Moray Fund. Thanks are due to Zhang Yuqing (DNHM) for collecting the samples. Nicola Cayzer (University of Edinburgh, UK) provided expert advice in sample preparation and SEM imaging. Thank you to Ffion Robb and Kim Kean (both University of Edinburgh, UK) for their help in measuring melanosomes for the assessment of experimenter bias. Tim Croudace (University of Dundee, UK) was a source of valuable guidance for some of the statistical analysis and helped proofread several drafts of the manuscript. Thanks also to Fiann Smithwick (University of Bristol, UK) who soaked samples in acetone and provided images of samples 9 and 13, which had been measured at an earlier date to check melanosome preservation success. We are grateful to Ashley Poust (San Diego Natural History Museum, USA) for supplying detailed photographs of the specimen, and along with an anonymous referee, helpful comments that improved this manuscript in review.

Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2023 A.D. Croudace et al.

Keywords

  • China
  • colour reconstruction
  • Cretaceous
  • Dinosauria
  • Dromaeosauridae
  • iridescence
  • juvenile
  • melanosome
  • palaeocolour
  • Paraves
  • Wulong bohaiensis

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