Air sacsare spaces within an organism where there is the constant presence of air. Among modern animals,birdspossess the most air sacs (9–11), with their extinctdinosaurianrelatives showing a great increase[clarification needed]in thepneumatization(presence of air) in their bones.[1]Birds use air sacs for respiration as well as a number of other things.[2][clarification needed]Theropods,likeAerosteon,have many air sacs in the body that are not just in bones, and they can be identified as the more primitive form of modern bird airways.[3][clarification needed]Sauropodsare well known for the large number of air pockets in their bones (especially vertebra), although one theropod,Deinocheirus,shows a rivalling number of air pockets.[4][5]

Air sacs in insects

edit

Air sacs in respiration

edit
Diagram showing the general layout of air sacs in a bird

Birds have a system of air sacs in theirventilation system.[2]The air sacs work to produce a unidirectional flow where air enters and exits the lung at the same rate, contrasting the lungs of othertetrapodssuch asmammalswhere air enters and exits the lung in atidal ventilation.[2]

Avian lungs have a bronchial system in which the air flows through dorsobronchi into the parabronchi before exiting via the ventrobronchi.[2]Gas exchange occurs at the parabronchi.[2]

Avian pulmonary air sacs are lined with simpleepithelialandsecretory cellssupported byelastinconnective tissues.[2]The air sacs themselves are either poorly vascularized or entirely avascular.[6]No gas exchange occurs within them.[6]There are five main air sacs in birds, three of which branch from the ventrobronchi, and two of which branch from the intrapulmonary bronchus connecting the dorsobronchi and ventrobronchi.[2]The air sacs are usually paired, except for the clavicular air sac, creating a total of 9 air sacs.[7]However, this morphology varies among bird species. Birds such asparrotshave different air sac arrangements.[8][clarification needed]The morphologies of the individual air sacs also vary among bird taxa.[7]

In birds, gas exchange and volume change do not occur in the same place.[2]While gas exchange occurs in the parabronchi in the lungs, the lungs do not change volume much during respiration.[9]Instead, voluminous expansion occurs in the air sacs.[2][9]These volume changes causepressure gradientsbetween air sacs, with higher gradients causing more air to flow over the parabronchi during inhalation and lower gradients casing more air to flow over the parabronchi during exhalation.[10]Different air sacs alternate contraction and expansion, causing air motion, the fundamental mechanism of avian respiration.[11]Thecomplianceof the air sacs is related to the timing of all of the moving parts involved in respiration.[12]

Birds have hollowpneumatic bones.The hollow air spaces in bird bones outside of the head are connected to the air sacs in a way that a bird with a blocked windpipe and a bone broken in a manner where the inside of the bone was connected to the outside world could still breathe.[9][13]These pneumatic bones are less vascularized than non-pneumatic bones and many pneumatic bones have pneumatic foramina (openings for air passage).[9]Skeletal pneumaticity often originates developmentally as offshoots of the air sacs, especially in thesynsacrum.[9][14]Bone pneumaticity is generally found in theappendicular skeleton.[9]Some birds, such aspenguinsorloons,have solid bones.[14][15]

Other uses for air sacs

edit

Water loss

edit

In birds, some temperature control occurs in the respiratory system.[16]Water vapor heats cool air during inhalation in the trachea, and increases its humidity.[16]The resulting evaporative water loss varies greatly and depends on several factors including air sac pressure and the subsequent rate of air flow through the trachea.[16]

Diving

edit
Anemperor penguin,an example of a diving bird

Indiving birds,the air sacs can aid in helping birds with respiration.[17]Movement of the muscles involved in diving can cause a pressure differential between the air sacs which would cause more air to move through the parabronchi.[17]This would then increase the uptake ofoxygenstored in the respiratory system.[17]In penguins, air sac volumes are constricted in deep dives to protect from the effects of water pressure.[18]Penguins have been found inflating their air sacs before dives and exhale much of the air during the deepest point of their dives to change buoyancy while descending and ascending during the dive.[18]

Song production

edit

Air sacs play a role insong productioninsongbirdsand related birds, with some studies hypothesizing that the air sac may be involved as aresonating chamber.[19]The pressure of air in the air sac is also heavily involved in song production, as different males singing the same song have similar modulations in air sac pressure.[20]Changes in air pressure patterns are indicative of respiratory muscle activity and the airflow around thesyrinx,the primary vocalization organ of songbirds.[20]The portion of the neural pathways which control respiration during vocalization changes air sac pressure to control vocal intensity.[21]The pressure in the interclavicular air sac is highly correlated with the fundamental frequency of birdsong in doves.[22]Birdsong primarily occurs in expiration and therefore syllables and fundamental frequency are highly correlated with increased interclavicular air sac pressure.[22][23][24]Changes in air sac pressure also affect the length of thetracheawhich can also affect thefundamental frequency.[23]The pressure can change midpoint of the folds of the syrinx, an action which converts the higher pressure into higher frequencies.[25]In a species oftyrannid(the sister group to true songbirds), birds have two different sources of sound around the trachea.[26]At high air sac pressures, the two sound sources have different frequencies, while at low pressure they have the same frequency.[26]The generation of bird trills involves modulation of the pressure in air sacs.[24]Since so many aspects of birdsong depend on air sac pressure, there is a trade off between trill rate and the duration of each call, though this has not been studied in depth.[24]

Function

edit
Birds' lungs obtain fresh air during both exhalation and inhalation, because the air sacs do all the "pumping" and the lungs simply absorb oxygen.

From about 1870 onwards scientists have generally agreed that the post-cranial skeletons of many dinosaurs contained many air-filled cavities (postcranial skeletal pneumaticity)[citation needed],especially in the vertebrae. Pneumatization of the skull (such asparanasal sinuses) is found in bothsynapsidsandarchosaurs,but postcranial pneumatization is found only in birds, non-aviansaurischiandinosaurs, andpterosaurs.

For a long time these cavities were regarded simply as weight-saving devices, butBakkerproposed that they were connected toair sacslike those that makebirds'respiratory systemsthe most efficient of all animals'.[27]

John Rubenet al.(1997, 1999, 2003, 2004) disputed this and suggested that dinosaurs had a "tidal" respiratory system (in and out) powered by a crocodile-likehepatic pistonmechanism – muscles attached mainly to thepubispull theliverbackwards, which makes the lungs expand to inhale; when these muscles relax, the lungs return to their previous size and shape, and the animal exhales. They also presented this as a reason for doubting thatbirds descended from dinosaurs.[28][29][30][31]

Critics have claimed that, without avian air sacs, modest improvements in a few aspects of a modern reptile'scirculatoryand respiratory systems would enable the reptile to achieve 50% to 70% of the oxygen flow of a mammal of similar size,[32]and that lack of avian air sacs would not prevent the development ofendothermy.[33]Very few formal rebuttals have been published in scientific journals of Rubenet al.'s claim that dinosaurs could not have had avian-style air sacs; but one points out that theSinosauropteryxfossil on which they based much of their argument was severely flattened and therefore it was impossible to tell whether the liver was the right shape to act as part of a hepatic piston mechanism.[34]Some recent papers simply note without further comment that Rubenet al.argued against the presence of air sacs in dinosaurs.[35]

Evidence

edit

Researchers have presented evidence and arguments for air sacs insauropods,"prosauropods",coelurosaurs,ceratosaurs,and the theropodsAerosteonandCoelophysis.

In advanced sauropods ( "neosauropods") the vertebrae of the lower back and hip regions show signs of air sacs. In early sauropods only the cervical (neck) vertebrae show these features. If the developmental sequence found in bird embryosis a guide,air sacs actually evolved before the channels in the skeleton that accommodate them in later forms.[36][37]

Comparison between the air sacs ofMajungasaurusand a bird

Evidence of air sacs has also been found in theropods. Studies indicate that fossils ofcoelurosaurs,[38]ceratosaurs,[35]and the theropodsCoelophysisandAerosteonexhibit evidence of air sacs.Coelophysis,from the lateTriassic,is one of the earliest dinosaurs whose fossils show evidence of channels for air sacs.[37]Aerosteon,a Late Cretaceousmegaraptorid,had the most bird-like air sacs found so far.[3]

Earlysauropodomorphs,including the group traditionally called "prosauropods", may also have had air sacs. Although possible pneumatic indentations have been found inPlateosaurusandThecodontosaurus,the indentations are very small. One study in 2007 concluded that prosauropods likely had abdominal and cervical air sacs, based on the evidence for them in sister taxa (theropods and sauropods). The study concluded that it was impossible to determine whether prosauropods had a bird-like flow-through lung, but that the air sacs were almost certainly present.[39]A further indication for the presence of air sacs and their use in lung ventilation comes from a reconstruction of the air exchange volume (the volume of air exchanged with each breath) ofPlateosaurus,which when expressed as a ratio of air volume per body weight at 29 ml/kg is similar to values of geese and other birds, and much higher than typical mammalian values.[40]

So far no evidence of air sacs has been found inornithischiandinosaurs. But this does not imply that ornithischians could not have had metabolic rates comparable to those of mammals, since mammals also do not have air sacs.[41]

Development

edit

Three explanations have been suggested for the development of air sacs in dinosaurs:[3]

  • Increase in respiratory capacity. This is probably the most common hypothesis, and fits well with the idea that many dinosaurs had fairly highmetabolic rates.
  • Improving balance and maneuvrability by lowering thecenter of gravityand reducingrotational inertia.However this does not explain the expansion of air sacs in the quadrupedal sauropods.
  • As a cooling mechanism. It seems that air sacs and feathers evolved at about the same time incoelurosaurs.If feathers retained heat, their owners would have required a means of dissipating excess heat. This idea is plausible but needs further empirical support.
The uncinate processes are the small white spurs about halfway along the ribs. The rest of this diagram shows the air sacs and other parts of a bird's respiratory system:1 cervical air sac, 2 clavicular air sac, 3 cranial thoracal air sac, 4 caudal thoracal air sac, 5 abdominal air sac (5' diverticulus into pelvic girdle), 6 lung, 7 trachea

Dinosaur respiratory systems with bird-like air sacs may have been capable of sustaining higher activity levels than mammals of similar size and build can sustain. In addition to providing a very efficient supply of oxygen, the rapid airflow would have been an effective cooling mechanism, which is essential for animals that are active but too large to get rid of all the excess heat through their skins.[41]

Calculations of the volumes of various parts of the sauropodApatosaurus'respiratory system support the evidence of bird-like air sacs in sauropods:

  • Assuming thatApatosaurus,like dinosaurs' nearest surviving relativescrocodiliansand birds, did not have adiaphragm,thedead-space volumeof a 30-ton specimen would be about 184 liters. This is the total volume of the mouth, trachea and air tubes. If the animal exhales less than this, stale air is not expelled and is sucked back into the lungs on the following inhalation.
  • Estimates of itstidal volume– the amount of air moved into or out of the lungs in a single breath – depend on the type ofrespiratory systemthe animal had: 904 liters if avian; 225 liters if mammalian; 19 liters if reptilian.

On this basis,Apatosauruscould not have had a reptilian respiratory system, as its tidal volume would have been less than its dead-space volume, so that stale air was not expelled but was sucked back into the lungs. Likewise, a mammalian system would only provide to the lungs about 225 − 184 = 41 liters of fresh, oxygenated air on each breath.Apatosaurusmust therefore have had either a system unknown in the modern world or one likebirds', with multiple air sacs and a flow-through lung. Furthermore, an avian system would only need a lung volume of about 600 liters while a mammalian one would have required about 2,950 liters, which would exceed the estimated 1,700 liters of space available in a 30-tonApatosaurus′ chest.[42]

The palaeontologistPeter Wardhas argued that the evolution of the air sac system, which first appears in the very earliest dinosaurs, may have been in response to the very low (11%) atmospheric oxygen of theCarnianandNorianages of the Triassic Period.[43]

References

edit
  1. ^Romer AS,Parsons TS (1977).The Vertebrate Body.Holt-Saunders International. pp. 330–334.ISBN978-0-03-910284-5.
  2. ^abcdefghiBrown, R. E.; Brain, J. D.; Wang, N. (1997). "The avian respiratory system: a unique model for studies of respiratory toxicosis and for monitoring air quality".Environmental Health Perspectives.105(2): 188–200.doi:10.1289/ehp.97105188.ISSN0091-6765.PMC1469784.PMID9105794.
  3. ^abcSereno PC,Martinez RN, Wilson JA, Varricchio DJ, Alcober OA, Larsson HC (September 2008). Kemp T (ed.)."Evidence for avian intrathoracic air sacs in a new predatory dinosaur from Argentina".PLOS ONE.3(9): e3303.Bibcode:2008PLoSO...3.3303S.doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0003303.PMC2553519.PMID18825273.
  4. ^Lee YN,Barsbold R,Currie PJ,Kobayashi Y, Lee HJ,Godefroit P,et al. (November 2014). "Resolving the long-standing enigmas of a giant ornithomimosaur Deinocheirus mirificus".Nature.515(7526): 257–260.Bibcode:2014Natur.515..257L.doi:10.1038/nature13874.PMID25337880.S2CID2986017.
  5. ^Schwarz-Wings D, Meyer CA, Frey E, Manz-Steiner HR, Schumacher R (January 2010)."Mechanical implications of pneumatic neck vertebrae in sauropod dinosaurs".Proceedings. Biological Sciences.277(1678): 11–17.doi:10.1098/rspb.2009.1275.PMC2842622.PMID19801376.
  6. ^abMaina, John N. (2006)."Development, structure, and function of a novel respiratory organ, the lung-air sac system of birds: to go where no other vertebrate has gone".Biological Reviews.81(4): 545–579.doi:10.1017/S1464793106007111.ISSN1464-7931.PMID17038201.
  7. ^abEl-Sayed, Ahmed K.; Hassan, Said (15 October 2019)."Gross morphological features of the air sacs of the hooded crow ( Corvus cornix )".Anatomia, Histologia, Embryologia.49(2): 159–166.doi:10.1111/ahe.12504.ISSN0340-2096.PMID31617250.S2CID204740645.
  8. ^Bejdić, Pamela; Hadžimusić, Nejra; Šerić-Haračić, Sabina; Maksimović, Alan; Lutvikadić, Ismar; Hrković-Porobija, Amina (2021)."Morphology of the Air Sacs in Crimson Rosella (Platycercus elegans) Parrots".Advances in Animal and Veterinary Sciences.9(11).doi:10.17582/journal.aavs/2021/9.11.1959.1963.ISSN2309-3331.S2CID241752095.
  9. ^abcdefO'Connor, Patrick M. (2004)."Pulmonary pneumaticity in the postcranial skeleton of extant Aves: A case study examining Anseriformes".Journal of Morphology.261(2): 141–161.doi:10.1002/jmor.10190.ISSN0362-2525.PMID15216520.S2CID12619680.
  10. ^Cieri, Robert L.; Farmer, C. G. (2016)."Unidirectional pulmonary airflow in vertebrates: a review of structure, function, and evolution".Journal of Comparative Physiology B.186(5): 541–552.doi:10.1007/s00360-016-0983-3.ISSN0174-1578.PMID27062030.S2CID253893701.
  11. ^Nguyen, Quynh M.; Oza, Anand U.; Abouezzi, Joanna; Sun, Guanhua; Childress, Stephen; Frederick, Christina; Ristroph, Leif (2021-03-19)."Flow Rectification in Loopy Network Models of Bird Lungs".Physical Review Letters.126(11): 114501.arXiv:2103.11237.Bibcode:2021PhRvL.126k4501N.doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.126.114501.PMID33798375.S2CID232307000.
  12. ^Harvey, Emily P.; Ben-Tal, Alona (2016-02-10)."Robust Unidirectional Airflow through Avian Lungs: New Insights from a Piecewise Linear Mathematical Model".PLOS Computational Biology.12(2): e1004637.Bibcode:2016PLSCB..12E4637H.doi:10.1371/journal.pcbi.1004637.ISSN1553-7358.PMC4749316.PMID26862752.
  13. ^Schmidt-Nielsen, Knut (1971)."How Birds Breathe".Scientific American.225(6): 72–79.Bibcode:1971SciAm.225f..72S.doi:10.1038/scientificamerican1271-72.ISSN0036-8733.JSTOR24922873.
  14. ^abSmith, Nathan D. (2011-11-18)."Body Mass and Foraging Ecology Predict Evolutionary Patterns of Skeletal Pneumaticity in the Diverse" Waterbird "Clade".Evolution.66(4): 1059–1078.doi:10.1111/j.1558-5646.2011.01494.x.ISSN0014-3820.PMID22486689.S2CID42793145.
  15. ^Gier, H. T. (1952)."The Air Sacs of the Loon".The Auk.61(1): 40–49.doi:10.2307/4081291.JSTOR4081291.
  16. ^abcSverdlova, Nina S.; Lambertz, Markus; Witzel, Ulrich; Perry, Steven F. (2012-09-20). Samakovlis, Christos (ed.)."Boundary Conditions for Heat Transfer and Evaporative Cooling in the Trachea and Air Sac System of the Domestic Fowl: A Two-Dimensional CFD Analysis".PLOS ONE.7(9): e45315.Bibcode:2012PLoSO...745315S.doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0045315.ISSN1932-6203.PMC3447945.PMID23028927.
  17. ^abcBoggs, D F; Butler, P J; Wallace, S E (1998-09-15)."Differential air sac pressures in diving tufted ducks Aythya fuligula".Journal of Experimental Biology.201(18): 2665–2668.doi:10.1242/jeb.201.18.2665.ISSN1477-9145.PMID9716518.
  18. ^abPonganis, P. J.; St Leger, J.; Scadeng, M. (2015-03-01)."Penguin lungs and air sacs: implications for baroprotection, oxygen stores and buoyancy".Journal of Experimental Biology.218(5): 720–730.doi:10.1242/jeb.113647.ISSN1477-9145.PMID25740902.S2CID30250072.
  19. ^Beckers, G. J. L.; Suthers, R. A.; ten Cate, C. (2003)."Pure-tone birdsong by resonance filtering of harmonic overtones".PNAS.100(12): 7372–7376.Bibcode:2003PNAS..100.7372B.doi:10.1073/pnas.1232227100.PMC165882.PMID12764226.
  20. ^abFranz, M.; Goller, F. (2002)."Respiratory Units of Motor Production and Song Imitation in the Zebra Finch".Journal of Neurobiology.51(2): 129–141.doi:10.1002/neu.10043.PMID11932954.
  21. ^Wild, J. M. (1998)."Neural pathways for the control of birdsong production".Journal of Neurobiology.33(5): 653–670.doi:10.1002/(SICI)1097-4695(19971105)33:5<653::AID-NEU11>3.0.CO;2-A.PMID9369465.
  22. ^abBeckers, Gabriël J. L.; Suthers, Roderick A.; Cate, Carel ten (2003-06-01)."Mechanisms of frequency and amplitude modulation in ring dove song".Journal of Experimental Biology.206(11): 1833–1843.doi:10.1242/jeb.00364.hdl:1887/81094.ISSN1477-9145.PMID12728005.S2CID17374715.
  23. ^abDaley, Monica; Goller, Franz (2004)."Tracheal length changes during zebra finch song and their possible role in upper vocal tract filtering".Journal of Neurobiology.59(3): 319–330.doi:10.1002/neu.10332.ISSN0022-3034.PMID15146548.
  24. ^abcGoller, Franz (2022-02-01)."Vocal athletics – from birdsong production mechanisms to sexy songs".Animal Behaviour.184:173–184.doi:10.1016/j.anbehav.2021.04.009.ISSN0003-3472.S2CID235226514.
  25. ^Trevisan, M. A.; Mindlin, G. B. (2009-08-28)."New perspectives on the physics of birdsong".Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences.367(1901): 3239–3254.Bibcode:2009RSPTA.367.3239T.doi:10.1098/rsta.2009.0076.ISSN1364-503X.PMC3263773.PMID19620121.
  26. ^abDöppler, Juan F.; Amador, Ana; Goller, Franz; Mindlin, Gabriel B. (2020-12-11)."Dynamics behind rough sounds in the song of the Pitangus sulphuratus".Physical Review E.102(6): 062415.Bibcode:2020PhRvE.102f2415D.doi:10.1103/PhysRevE.102.062415.PMID33466024.S2CID230594046.
  27. ^Bakker RT (1972). "Anatomical and ecological evidence of endothermy in dinosaurs".Nature.238(5359): 81–85.Bibcode:1972Natur.238...81B.doi:10.1038/238081a0.S2CID4176132.
  28. ^Ruben JA, Jones TD, Geist NR, Hillenius WJ (November 1997). "Lung structure and ventilation in theropod dinosaurs and early birds".Science.278(5341): 1267–1270.Bibcode:1997Sci...278.1267R.doi:10.1126/science.278.5341.1267.
  29. ^Ruben JA, Geist NR, Hillenius WJ, Jones TD, Signore M (January 1999)."Pulmonary function and metabolic physiology of theropod dinosaurs"(PDF).Science.283(5401): 514–516.Bibcode:1999Sci...283..514R.doi:10.1126/science.283.5401.514.PMID9915693.
  30. ^Ruben JA, Jones TD, Geist NR (2003). "Respiratory and reproductive paleophysiology of dinosaurs and early birds".Physiological and Biochemical Zoology.76(2): 141–164.doi:10.1086/375425.hdl:10211.1/1472.PMID12794669.S2CID222819.
  31. ^Hillenius WJ, Ruben JA (November–December 2004). "The evolution of endothermy in terrestrial vertebrates: Who? When? Why?".Physiological and Biochemical Zoology.77(6): 1019–1042.doi:10.1086/425185.PMID15674773.S2CID29300018.
  32. ^Hicks JW, Farmer CG (November 1997)."Lung Ventilation and Gas Exchange in Theropod Dinosaurs".Science.278(5341): 1267–1270.Bibcode:1997Sci...278.1267R.doi:10.1126/science.278.5341.1267.
  33. ^Hicks JW, Farmer CG (September 1999). "Gas exchange potential in reptilian lungs: implications for the dinosaur-avian connection".Respiration Physiology.117(2–3): 73–83.doi:10.1016/S0034-5687(99)00060-2.PMID10563436.
  34. ^Currie PJ, Chen PJ (December 2001)."Anatomy ofSinosauropteryx primafrom Liaoning, northeastern China "(PDF).Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences.38(12): 1705–1727.Bibcode:2001CaJES..38.1705C.doi:10.1139/cjes-38-12-1705.
  35. ^abO'Connor PM, Claessens LP (July 2005). "Basic avian pulmonary design and flow-through ventilation in non-avian theropod dinosaurs".Nature.436(7048): 253–256.Bibcode:2005Natur.436..253O.doi:10.1038/nature03716.PMID16015329.S2CID4390587.
  36. ^Wedel MJ (2003)."Vertebral pneumaticity, air sacs, and the physiology of sauropod dinosaurs".Paleobiology.29(2): 243–255.Bibcode:2003Pbio...29..243W.doi:10.1666/0094-8373(2003)029<0243:VPASAT>2.0.CO;2.S2CID46619244.Full text currently online at"Findarticles.com: Vertebral pneumaticity, air sacs, and the physiology of sauropod dinosaurs".Paleobiology.2003.and"Vertebral pneumaticity, air sacs, and the physiology of sauropod dinosaurs"(PDF).Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 2015-02-15.Detailed anatomical analyses can be found atWedel MJ (2003)."The Evolution of Vertebral Pneumaticity in Sauropod Dinosaurs"(PDF).Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology.23(2): 344–357.doi:10.1671/0272-4634(2003)023[0344:TEOVPI]2.0.CO;2.S2CID55884062.
  37. ^abWedel MJ (June 2006)."Origin of postcranial skeletal pneumaticity in dinosaurs"(PDF).Integrative Zoology.1(2): 80–85.doi:10.1111/j.1749-4877.2006.00019.x.PMID21395998.
  38. ^Naish D, Martill DM, Frey E (June 2004). "Ecology, systematics and biogeographical relationships of dinosaurs, including a new theropod, from the Santana Formation (?Albian, Early Cretaceous) of Brazil".Historical Biology.16(2–4): 57–70.Bibcode:2004HBio...16...57N.CiteSeerX10.1.1.394.9219.doi:10.1080/08912960410001674200.S2CID18592288.This is also one of several topics featured in a post on Naish's blog,"Basal tyrant dinosaurs and my petMirischia".- noteMirischiawas acoelurosaur,which Naish believes was closely related toCompsognathus.
  39. ^Wedel M (2007)."What pneumaticity tells us about 'prosauropods', and vice versa"(PDF).Special Papers in Palaeontology.77:207–222. Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 2008-07-05.Retrieved2007-10-31.
  40. ^Mallison H (2010)."The digitalPlateosaurusII: an assessment of the range of motion of the limbs and vertebral column and of previous reconstructions using a digital skeletal mount ".Acta Palaeontologica Polonica.55(3): 433–458.doi:10.4202/app.2009.0075.
  41. ^abReid RE (1997). "Dinosaurian Physiology: the Case for" Intermediate "Dinosaurs". In Farlow JO, Brett-Surman MK (eds.).The Complete Dinosaur.Bloomington: Indiana University Press. pp. 449–473.ISBN978-0-253-33349-0.Retrieved2008-09-12.
  42. ^Paladino FV, Spotila JR, Dodson P (1997). "A Blueprint for Giants: Modeling the Physiology of Large Dinosaurs". In Farlow JO, Brett-Surman MK (eds.).The Complete Dinosaur.Bloomington, Ind.: Indiana University Press. pp. 491–504.ISBN978-0-253-21313-6.
  43. ^Ward P(2006)."The Triassic Explosion".Out of thin air: Dinosaurs, birds, and earth's ancient atmosphere.National Academies Press. pp. 159–198.ISBN9780309141239.