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avatar_DinoLord

Theropods couldn't taste sweets

Started by DinoLord, September 17, 2014, 12:05:40 AM

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DinoLord



laticauda


I guess any omnivorous Cretaceous theropods there may have been were not eating much fruit.
[/quote]

Perhaps, but lets not forget the power of sight, smell, and location.  Birds have excellent color vision, so it is possible they did eat the fruit that had the correct appealing color.

DinoLord

Quote from: laticauda on September 17, 2014, 12:32:48 AM

Perhaps, but lets not forget the power of sight, smell, and location.  Birds have excellent color vision, so it is possible they did eat the fruit that had the correct appealing color.

Good points. Any omnivorous theropods probably did eat some fruit if it was available, but I guess they didn't have a large frugivorous component to their diet (unless they too re-evolved the ability to taste sweets). The angiosperms were probably more geared towards attracting ornithischians anyways.

tyrantqueen

In the UK, the word "sweets" means what you would call in America "candy". Basically this stuff:



Was that intentional? I find it sort of humourous, but it's also true.

Paleogene Pals

In my part of the world, "sweet" refers to black gold, Texas tea.

DinoLord

Quote from: tyrantqueen on September 17, 2014, 05:53:36 AM
In the UK, the word "sweets" means what you would call in America "candy".

Was that intentional? I find it sort of humourous, but it's also true.

I had always preferred using the term 'sweets' over 'candy' myself.  ;)

CityRaptor

Interesting. I wonder what that means for the chocolate bar eating Velociraptor in the Lost World novel...
Jurassic Park is frightning in the dark
All the dinosaurs are running wild
Someone let T. Rex out of his pen
I'm afraid those things'll harm me
'Cause they sure don't act like Barney
And they think that I'm their dinner, not their friend
Oh no

amanda

Theropods ate jelly babies!!! I am SURE of it. 100%....:D

HD-man

Quote from: DinoLord on September 17, 2014, 12:05:40 AMhttp://arstechnica.com/science/2014/09/dinosaurs-lost-the-ability-to-taste-sugar-hummingbirds-re-evolved-it/

I guess any omnivorous Cretaceous theropods there may have been were not eating much fruit.

Maybe I missed something, but how do they know that this went for theropods in particular & not dinos in general, given their carnivorous archosaur ancestors?
I'm also known as JD-man at deviantART: http://jd-man.deviantart.com/

Ultimatedinoking

This isn't really surprising, many animals can't taste some tastes.

So no chocosaurus rex.  :)
I may not like feathered dinosaurs and stumpy legged Spinosaurs, but I will keep those opinions to myself, I will not start a debate over it, I promise. 😇
-UDK


stargatedalek

I think its highly likely for omnivorous (especially frugivorous) theropods to have also re-evolved such taste
and on that note, are there any theropods thought to be frugivorous? I would think oviraptors, but that might just be the parrot bill stereotype

tyrantqueen

It's not a dinosaur, but I believe Tapejara/Tupandactylus was thought to be a frugivore because of the shape of its beak.

Ultimatedinoking

Quote from: stargatedalek on September 29, 2014, 12:06:35 PM
I think its highly likely for omnivorous (especially frugivorous) theropods to have also re-evolved such taste
and on that note, are there any theropods thought to be frugivorous? I would think oviraptors, but that might just be the parrot bill stereotype

But remember, plant parts that are often called "fruit" didn't appear until pretty late in the Mesozoic, and proto fruit might have been sour, ad since meat and insects don't have a "sweetness" to them (except honeypot ants), the theropods the needed to get their sweet tooths back were probably few and very specialized, like oviraptors.
I may not like feathered dinosaurs and stumpy legged Spinosaurs, but I will keep those opinions to myself, I will not start a debate over it, I promise. 😇
-UDK

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