T. rex Was Likely an Invasive Species (2024)

March 2, 2016

3 min read

T. rex Was Likely an Invasive Species

The giant tyrannosaur may have migrated from Asia to western North America across a land bridge 67 million years ago

By Laura Geggel & LiveScience

Tyrannosaurus rex, king of the dinosaur age, wasn't a North American native as many experts had previously thought, a new study suggests.

Instead, the giant tyrannosaur was likely an invasive species from Asia that dispersed into western North America once the opportunity presented itself, paleontologists said.

"It's possible thatT. rexwas an immigrant species from Asia," said study co-researcher Steve Brusatte, a paleontologist at the University of Edinburgh in Scotland. But he cautioned that the finding isn't necessarily a "slam dunk," and that more research is needed to say for sure. [Gory Guts: See Photos of a T. Rex Autopsy]

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T. rexis one of the biggest meat eaters ever to live on land, but relatively little is known about its family tree. In a study published earlier this month, Brusatte and Thomas Carr, an associate professor of biology at Carthage College in Wisconsin, analyzed 28 different tyrannosaur species and constructed a family tree, noting approximately when and where each species lived.

Fossil evidence is lacking, but researchers suspect that the predecessors of tyrannosaurs lived on the supercontinent Pangaea, which began to break up about 200 million years ago, during the Triassic period. This would explain why tyrannosaurs fossils have been found on different continents, including Asia, western North America (called Laramidia at the time), eastern North America (Appalachia) and Europe, Carr said.

As time went on, the tyrannosaurs evolved in their respective places, meaning that the tyrannosaurs in Asia grew to look different than the ones in North America. But, around 67 million years ago, the seaway between Asia and North America went down, leaving a land bridge between the two continents, Carr said.

T. rex Was Likely an Invasive Species (1)

PerhapsT. rexcrossed this route into North America, Carr said. Researchers have uncovered countlessT. rexfossils in western North America, but a careful analysis ofT. rex's skeletal features suggests that it is Asian in origin, the paleontologists found.

In fact,T. rexis closely related to two Asian tyrannosaurs,TarbosaurusandZhuchengtyrannus, the researchers found.

"Tarbosaurusis the Asian version ofT. rex," Brusatte told Live Science in an email. "Or, you could say thatT. rexis the North American version ofTarbosaurus. They are so similar in terms of their monstrous size, their proportions, their massive jaw muscles and thick teeth and even many minutiae of their skull bones."

Zhuchengtyrannusis also similar toT. rex, though it's more distantly related, Brusatte and Carr said.

Asian invasion

T. rexlived from about 67 million to 65 million years ago, going extinct when a 6-mile-long (10 kilometers)asteroid slammed into Earthand killed the nonavian dinosaurs.

During that time, the 7-ton (6.3 metric tons)T. rexmonster spread from modern-day Alberta to Texas. (A giant seaway in the middle of North America preventedT. rexfrom reaching the East Coast, the researchers said.) BeforeT. rexinvaded North America, presumably from Asia, other tyrannosaurs lived in western North America, but they disappeared shortly afterT. rexcame onto the scene.

It's unclear why these large tyrannosaurs went extinct, butT. rexmay have played a role in their demise, the researchers said. [Photos: The Near-Complete WankelT.Rex]

"Regardless of whereT. rexcomes from, when it enters the fossil record, it seems to take over immediately, like an invasive species," Brusette said. "It rose to the top of the food chain and elbowed out all competitors — or perhaps I should say outmuscled them, as their pathetic little arms didn't have very big elbows."

The new finding contradicts earlier studies, some of which say thatT. rexis the culmination of tens of millions of years of dinosaur evolution within North America, Brusatte said.

"This also is a good example of how different family trees can imply different things aboutevolution," Brusatte said. "This is why we spend so much time building family trees for fossil groups: They tell us how different species are related to each other, which then allows us to tease out their evolutionary stories, the same way constructing genealogies for our own families tells us how our ancestors led to us."

The study was published online Feb. 2 in thejournal Scientific Reports.

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T. rex Was Likely an Invasive Species (2024)
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