Dino of the week: the Leptoceratops - Action News
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Dino of the week: the Leptoceratops

Millions of years after they roamed prehistoric Alberta, this horn-faced runt continues to live in his celebrity cousins shadow.

'Triceratops grew to a size larger than an African elephant. Leptoceratops was closer in size to a big pig'

Leptoceratops, a horn-faced herbivore, roamed Alberta millions of years ago. (Nobu Tamura)

Millions of years after they roamed prehistoric Alberta, thishorn-faced runt continues to live in his celebrity cousin's shadow.

Though their anatomy might suggest otherwise, the Leptoceratops shared a common ancestor with the famed three-horned Triceratops.

As part of CBC Edmonton's summer-long series Backyard Dinosaurs which will feature a different dinosaur found in Alberta each week University of Alberta paleontologist Scott Persons talked aboutthe relationship between these two unlikely relatives onthe Radio Active afternoon show.

"Although Leptoceratops and Triceratops belong to the same family, they looked very different," Persons said.

"Leptoceratops has no big forward pointing horns, and it was a small dinosaur. Triceratops grew to a size larger than an African elephant. Leptoceratops was closer in size to a big pig."

Frills, cheeks and feet

Leptoceratopsdid have a pair of short downward pointing horns near its cheeks, as did Triceratops. And the 150-pound dinosaur sharedanother key skull feature with its powerfulcousin: a frill.

But unlike his bigger cousin, this lean little herbivore ran around on two legs instead of four.

Persons said their bipedal preference, and 'cheeky' face, give paleontologists valuable insight intothe early evolution of the ceratopsian species.
Unlike its cousin the Leptoceratops, the famed three-horned Triceratops grew to a similar size to the modern day African elephant. (Allie Caulfield)

"It shows how the ceratopsian family started out," Persons said.

"They were small herbivores, with no big horns, running around on just two legs. In fact, being bipedal is the primitive condition for all dinosaurs. They all started out two- legged, and multiple families independently evolved to walk on all fours.

"That's something that makes the evolutionary story of dinosaurs very different from of that of mammals. Among mammals, being quadrupedal is the primitive starting condition, and critters like kangaroos and us humans, who move about on only two legs, are the oddballs."

'Nobody's ancestor'

Though Leptoceratops and Triceratops represent two different branches of the same family tree, Persons said they represent two very different outcomes of prehistoric evolution.

"What I love about Leptoceratops is, all appearances to the contrary, it's nobody's ancestor. In fact, Leptoceratops lived alongside, not millions of years before, its big three- horned cousin."

'This isn't evolution as it is depicted in X-Men orPokemon'

Though they may have acquired an inferiority complex, the Leptoceratops certainly didn't suffer from his stunted size.

Persons said both species were among the most plentiful in Alberta, and among the last to become extinct.

"This isn't evolution as it is depicted in X-Men or Pokemon. Things don't always evolve to be bigger, stronger, scarier, and more complicated.

"As Leptoceratops shows, bigger doesn't necessarily mean better, and a species can be just as successful without growing more horns and frills."