Body reconstruction and size estimation of plesiosaurs

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Body reconstruction and size estimation of plesiosaurs

Authors

Zhao, R. J.

Abstract

Body size is the key to understanding many biological properties. Sizes of extinct animals are usually estimated from body reconstructions since their masses can not be weighed directly. Plesiosaurs were Mesozoic marine reptiles that were diverse in both body plan and size. Attempts to estimate body masses of plesiosaurs were rare in the past two centuries, possibly due to lack of knowledge about their postcranial anatomy and body shapes in life. The burst of plesiosaur studies in the past two decades has greatly expanded our cognition of their physiology, taxonomy, potential behavior and even soft body outlines. Here I present a comprehensive review of relevant knowledge, and propose a uniform set of methodology for rigorous body reconstruction of plesiosaurs. Twenty-two plesiosaur models were constructed under these criteria, and they were subsequently used as samples to find proxies for body mass. It is revealed that multiple skeletal elements are good indicators of plesiosaur size. This study offers scaling equations for size estimation, enabling quick acquisition of body mass information from fragmented fossils. A summary of body size evolution of different plesiosaur clades is also provided.

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