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New study refutes claim that T. rex was three separate species
Paleontologists find insufficient evidence that iconic Tyrannosaurus rex should be reclassified
Published in Daily News Egypt on 25 - 07 - 2022

A new study has refuted a provocative claim made earlier this year that fossils classified as the dinosaur Tyrannosaurus rex represent three separate species. The rebuttal, published on Monday in the journal Evolutionary Biology, found that the earlier proposal lacked sufficient evidence to split up the iconic species.
"Tyrannosaurus rex remains the one true king of the dinosaurs," said study co-author Steve Brusatte, a paleontologist at the University of Edinburgh who conducted his Ph.D. work at the Museum. "Recently, a bold theory was announced to much fanfare: what we call T. rex was actually multiple species. It is true that the fossils we have are somewhat variable in size and shape, but as we show in our new study, that variation is minor and cannot be used to neatly separate the fossils into easily defined clusters. Based on all the fossil evidence we currently have, T. rex stands alone as the single giant apex predator from the end of the Age of Dinosaurs in North America."
In March 2022, authors of the controversial study, also published in Evolutionary Biology, made the case that T. rex should be reclassified as three species: the standard T. rex, the bulkier "T. imperator," and the slimmer "T. regina." The study was based on analysis of the leg bones and teeth of 38 T. rex specimens.
The authors of the new study revisited the data presented in the earlier paper and also added data points from 112 species of living dinosaurs—birds—and from four non-avian theropod dinosaurs. They found that the multiple species argument was based on a limited comparative sample, non-comparable measurements, and improper statistical techniques.
"Their study claimed that the variation in T. rex specimens was so high that they were probably from multiple closely related species of giant meat-eating dinosaur," said James Napoli, co-lead author of the rebuttal study and a graduating doctoral student in the Museum's Richard Gilder Graduate School. "But this claim was based on a very small comparative sample. When compared to data from hundreds of living birds, we actually found that T. rex is less variable than most living theropod dinosaurs. This line of evidence for proposed multiple species doesn't hold up."
"Pinning down variation in long-extinct animals is a major challenge for paleontologists," said co-lead author Thomas Carr from Carthage College. "Our study shows that rigorous statistical analyses that are grounded in our knowledge of living animals is the best way to clarify the boundaries of extinct species. In practical terms, the three-species model is so poorly defined that many excellent specimens can't be identified. That's a clear warning sign of a hypothesis that doesn't map onto the real world."


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