Some scientists previously had considered T. rex a scavenger of carrion, rather than a hunter, due to various features including its sense of smell.
The new study, which analyzed data for a range of meat-eating dinosaurs as well as living carnivores (alligators), suggests T. rex likely was a true hunter and took down live prey such as other dinosaurs.
Courtesy of Yoshitsugu Kobayashi
This CT scan of the skull of an ornithomimid dinosaur shows the olfactory bulbs (red) and the forebrain (blue).
To figure this out, Darla Zelenitsky, a paleontologist at the University of Calgary in Alberta, and her colleagues looked at the importance of the sense of smell among various meat-eating dinosaurs called theropods, based on the size of the dinosaurs' olfactory bulbs, the brain area linked with smell.
Dinosaur brains are not preserved, but the impressions of such brain regions left on skull bones or the space they occupied in the skull reveals the size and shape of the different parts of the brain.
The researchers relied on computed tomography scans and museum specimens or endocasts of the skulls to obtain data from a wide variety of theropods (including raptors and ostrich-like dinosaurs), the primitive bird Archaeopteryx and alligators.
While tyrannosaurs, including T. rex, and Velociraptor showed the largest olfactory bulbs relative to brain size and body mass, the worst sniffers based on bulb measurements were the oviraptors and the ostrich-like ornithomimids.
"They probably had a poor sense of smell, and it could imply an omnivorous or herbivorous diet," Zelenitsky told LiveScience, adding that past research also has suggested oviraptorids and ornithomimids could have eaten plants.
The oversized olfactory bulbs also suggest T. rex and its tyrannosaurid buddies, such as Gorgosaurus libratus, which sported arm feathers, relied on their strong sense of smell to find prey at night or in large territories, Zelenitsky said.
The extinct bird Archaeopteryx, thought to have evolved from small meat-eating dinosaurs, had an olfactory bulb size comparable to most theropod dinosaurs.
Most of today's birds have keen eyesight but lack a good nose, suggesting smell became less important at some point in birds' ancestral history, the researchers said.
The research is detailed in the current issue of the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B. foxnews.com
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