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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

The sad and sorry story of Dolly the diseased and doomed dinosaur

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In a warm and humid Jurassic Period landscape lush with plant and animal life in what is now southwest Montana, an adolescent long-necked dinosaur was miserably sick with flu and pneumonia-like symptoms — probably feverish and lethargic with laboured breathing, coughing, sneezing and diarrhoea.


Some 150 million years later, the skeletal remains of that unfortunate beast, nicknamed “Dolly,” represent the first-known dinosaur with evidence of respiratory illness — abnormal growths resembling fossilised broccoli on three neck bones that formed in response to an infection in air sacs linked to its lungs.


Scientists said on Thursday the dinosaur appears to have suffered from a fungal infection similar to aspergillosis, a common respiratory illness often fatal to modern birds and reptiles that sometimes causes bone infections. The condition may have killed Dolly, they said.


Dinosaurs suffered from maladies just like any other animals, but evidence is scarce in the fossil record because soft tissue rarely is preserved in a fossilisation process that favours hard stuff like bone, teeth and claws. Dinosaur fossils previously have shown pathologies such as broken and healed bones, tooth abscesses, blood-borne infections affecting bone, arthritis and even bone cancer.


Dolly belonged to a previously unknown species of sauropod dinosaur, a plant-eating group with long necks, long tails, small heads and four sturdy legs that included the largest land animals in Earth’s history.


Dolly, about 60 feet (18 metres) long and weighing perhaps 4 to 5 tonnes, died at between 15 and 20 years of age, said Cary Woodruff, director of paleontology at the Great Plains Dinosaur Museum in Malta, Montana and lead author of the study published in the journal Scientific Reports. Similar sauropods generally reached adulthood in their late 20s.


“Poor Dolly. She probably felt terrible with all the same signs and symptoms of a lower respiratory infection that we experience, such as fever, tightness in the chest, laboured breathing, a productive cough — eew!” said anatomist and study co-author Lawrence Witmer of the Ohio University Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine.


Allosaurus fossils have been found in the same area.


Dolly’s remains were unearthed in 1990 and 2013-2015. The scientific name of Dolly’s species will be revealed in a future study. The dinosaur appears closely related to the well-known Diplodocus.


The researchers do not know Dolly’s gender, but said the dinosaur was nicknamed after a famous singer. “After Dolly Parton, of course,” Woodruff said.


Dolly’s dilemma not only sheds light on medical conditions in deep time but provides insight into the anatomical structure of dinosaur lungs and air sacs.


Sauropods and meat-eating dinosaurs called theropods, a group that includes birds, possess respiratory tracts far more elaborate than in mammals including people. In addition to lungs, they have thin, balloon-like air sacs that invade the body cavity and many bones.


In Dolly, abnormal bone growths were present at the connection between respiratory tissue and bone in three vertebrae, evidence that the infection had spread from the lungs. — Reuters


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