Biology

Study suggests T. rex's legs were made for walkin' – not running

Study suggests T. rex's legs were made for walkin' – not running
Tyrannosaurus rex likely placed a premium on being able to cover long distances with little effort
Tyrannosaurus rex likely placed a premium on being able to cover long distances with little effort
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Tyrannosaurus rex likely placed a premium on being able to cover long distances with little effort
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Tyrannosaurus rex likely placed a premium on being able to cover long distances with little effort

If the Jurassic Park movies are to be believed, Tyrannosaurus rex spent a lot of time quickly chasing down its prey. According to a new study, though, its legs were probably designed more for endurance than for speed.

A team of American and Canadian researchers started by gathering data on the body mass, limb proportions and walking gait of over 70 theropod dinosaur species. The theropods were a group of long-legged, bipedal, hollow-boned dinosaurs that included T. rex.

Utilizing a variety of methods, the scientists proceeded to estimate the top running speed for each species, along with the amount of energy that the reptiles used when walking. It was found that for the smaller to medium-sized theropods, longer legs indeed translated to running faster. This finding was in line with those of previous studies.

However, for the larger species such as T. rex – which weighed over 1,000 kg (2,204 lb) – the big body size would have limited the top speed. In the case of those dinosaurs, the researchers determined that the animals' long legs more likely allowed for reduced energy expenditure while walking.

This makes sense, since while the smaller theropods would have to be capable of catching small, fast prey items (and avoid becoming prey themselves), the T. rex would need to efficiently cover long distances in order to find its larger, slower-moving prey – and it wouldn't need to escape from predators, as it didn't have any.

"The assumption tends to be that animals with adaptations for running, such as long legs, are adapted for a higher maximum speed, but this paper shows that there's more to running than top speed," says Thomas Holtz, a paleontologist at the University of Maryland. "When you’re a bigger animal, those adaptations may also be for endurance and efficiency. It may be about being a marathoner rather than a sprinter."

The paper on the study – which also included researchers from Mount Mary College, the University of Southern California, and McGill University – was recently published in the journal PLOS ONE.

Sources: University of Maryland, PLOS via EurekAlert

5 comments
5 comments
Sándor Dávid Papp
The researchers are totally wrong.
As a top predator, the T-Rex has to run as fast as possible.
And the legs of T-Rex are surely "running legs", anatomically optimized for running.
"Walking legs" are anatomically quite different, and never seen on top predators.
Bob Stuart
Finally! Elephants can't jump a gap that a cat clears with ease. It's that old square-cube law - the same one that makes monkey skeletons thin and gorilla skeletons thick.
buzzclick
Take a look at T Rex. Proportionally, its got the body of a chicken, but the legs and head are larger. So that indicates that this big fella was capable of sudden bursts of speed and walking but no endurance. So pouncing on prey was more its style, as long as it kept its mouth shut and waited for the right moment. What I'd like to know is how they copulated. Would the female have to be on her back?
Kpar
I read this article with interest, but something I already knew about indicates the conclusions drawn raises a question. The authors (presumably) did not have any actual live theropods to test.

Furthermore, I would like to bring up the information regarding a more modern animal- homo sapiens.

They (we) are not particularly fast, compared to the animal kingdom, but few, if any, land animals have the long range endurance that (used to be) common to the species...
ljaques
Chickens are the genetic downline from dinos. Ever watched a chicken walk vs running? They run a whole lot faster (wings notwithstanding) and more gracefully than they walk. I'm willing to believe that these study scientists also believe in AGWK. ;)