EEOB Publication - Hunter

March 19, 2026

EEOB Publication - Hunter

dog-eared EEOB graphic reveals word publication on following page

Tooth wear in juvenile and adult hadrosaurs: implications for parental care in Maiasaura

John P. Hunter, Christine M. Janis. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 690 (May 15): 113707. Special Issue: Advancing Dental Microwear Analysis for Dietary Reconstruction: From Dinosaurs to Mammals (first published online March 10, 2026). DOI: 10.1016/j.palaeo.2026.113707

Abstract

Juveniles of the hadrosaurian dinosaur Maiasaura peeblesorum exhibit different proportions of wear types in the dental batteries than seen in adult hadrosaurs. We interpret the wear types in hadrosaur teeth, by analogy with those of living mammalian herbivores, to be ‘shearing’ (indicative of trituration of fibrous food items such as mature leaves) and ‘crushing’ (indicative of trituration of more succulent, higher protein food items such as berries or nuts). Quantification of the dental wear patterns shows that juvenile maiasaurs exhibit significantly more crushing wear than adults. The proportions of shear to crush wear in the juveniles resembles that seen in extant mammals with a frugivorous/folivorous diet, whereas the proportions in the adults resemble those seen in extant mammals with a diet of high fiber content. We interpret these findings, in the light of other studies suggesting parental care through provisioning of young at the nest in maiasaurs, to mean that the adults may have been bringing food to the nest of a higher protein content than they themselves ate, behavior typical of certain extant birds.