Bagualosaurus

genus of sauropodomorph dinosaur From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bagualosaurus
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Bagualosaurus (from the Portuguese regional term "bagual", referring to a person or animal of strong build[1]) is a sauropodomorph dinosaur. It is the seventh known sauropodomorph discovered in Brazil. It was described in 2018.[1]

Quick facts Bagualosaurus Temporal range: Triassic~230-233 mya, Scientific classification ...

Bagualosaurus lived about 230223 million years ago, and grew to about 2.5 meters (8.2 ft) long.

The holotype specimen had a partial skull and jaw, twelve back vertebrae, two tail vertebrae, two chevrons, a pelvis, two partial hindlimbs and five fragmentary ribs. The pieces were found on a ravine at the edge of a pond in rural Agudo in 2007.

The fossil had been kept in a closet of the Laboratory of Paleovertebrates of the Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul South. The fossil was described as a sauropodomorph on May 25, 2018.

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Paleoecology

Bagualosaurus probably had a fully herbivorous diet. They had a dentition well adapted for eating vegetation. All sauropods have two characteristics in common: gigantism and herbivorism. Their diet may have been the source of later sauropod gigantism. Modern trees had not evolved, and herbivores at the time had cycads, ferns and early conifers as food.

Bagualosaurus lived in the Santa Maria Formation alongside animals such as the carnivorous sauropodomorph Buriolestes, the crocodile-like Cerritosaurus and the possible theropod Staurikosaurus.[2]

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References

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