NEW YORK -- When you think dinosaurs, you think big.
But German scientists say they've discovered a species that evolved into a dwarf, ending up only about one-third the size of its closest known relatives.
The fossils were of a four-legged plant-eater that was no lap dog: It measured about 20 feet from its snout to the tip of its long tail and it weighed about a ton.
But next to its close evolutionary cousin Camarasaurus, a well-known beast that stretched about 59 feet long, this guy was a runt.
The researchers say it's a case of island dwarfism, the tendency of big species to shrink over time when they find themselves on an island. It's a well-known occurrence among mammals. For example, fossil elephants only about 3 feet tall were found in Sicily.
Scientists think that in an environment of limited resources, smaller body size becomes an advantage, so captive populations shrink in body size over long periods of time.
The new creature is the best documented case of island dwarfism among dinosaurs, said P. Martin Sander, a paleontologist at the University of Bonn in Germany and lead author of a report in today's issue of the journal Nature.
The creature, dubbed Europasaurus holgeri, lived 154 million years ago in what is now northern Germany.
At that time, shallow seas covered the region and the creature evidently lived on an island, Sander said. It's not clear whether a bigger ancestor reached the island from elsewhere and founded a colony, or an existing population found itself isolated by rising sea levels .
Sander, who specializes in the microscopic structure of bone, got his first look at the fossils in 2003 after an amateur bone-hunter found them in a quarry. Sander and other scientists initially thought they were from juvenile animals, but details of the bone structure showed that they came from adults.
The bone analysis showed that Europasaurus grew more slowly than bigger dinosaurs. Its small size was a normal growth pattern for the species and not the result of disease, Sander said.
That has been a point of contention in trying to explain the so-called hobbits of Indonesia, fossil remains that have been interpreted as revealing that a dwarf species of humans lived on a remote island thousands of years ago.
Mark Norell, a dinosaur specialist at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City, said island dwarfism had been talked about for the hobbits and many animals, and ``to find it in dinosaurs is pretty neat."
Jeffrey Wilson, assistant professor of geological sciences at the University of Michigan, called the discovery exciting, and not just for the dwarfism. Europasaurus is a kind of long-necked dinosaur called a sauropod, and Wilson said the newly reported fossils are the best sauropod remains in Europe from the time period.![]()