Why did βTyrannosaurus rexβ have such short arms?

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What did the T. rex use its little arms for? β Aurora, age 11, Pemberton Township, New Jersey
One of the most famous dinosaurs to ever roam across Earth, Tyrannosaurus rex, has filled peopleβs minds with wonder since the first skeleton was discovered in the early 1900s.
Scientists believe T. rex, or King of the Tyrant Lizards, as its name translates, was a fearsome predator. An adult T. rex was massive in size β approximately 40 feet (12 meters) long and 20 feet (6 meters) tall, weighing as much as an African elephant. Each of its enormous sharp teeth could be near a foot (0.3 meters) in length from the root to the tip.
Iβm a paleontologist, and I use fossils to study how animals lived and evolved over long periods of time. One of the coolest things about being a paleontologist is that there are always new questions to ask and new things to learn β even about a super-well-known dino like T.rex, which went extinct just over 65 million years ago.
One T. rex mystery has to do with this giant predatorβs relatively tiny arms. Why would it have arms so short that it couldnβt even reach its own mouth? How did it use them?
How βshortβ is short?
First, letβs define what we mean by βshort.β
The biggest T. rex could measure 45 feet (14 meters) from the snout to the tip of the tail, but their arms were only about 3 feet (1 meter) long. On average, a T. rexβs arms were just about 30% of the length of its legs.
In comparison, humans have, on average, arms around 66% of the length of their legs. If people had the same arm proportions as a T.rex, a 6-foot (1.8 meters) tall person would have arms only 10 or 12 inches (25 to 30 centimeters) long!
T. rex isnβt the only dinosaur with such short arms. The evolutionary trend toward shorter arms in theropods β the larger group of meat-eating, two-legged dinosaurs that T. rex belongs to β happened multiple times. Similar to how wings separately evolved in different animals β like birds and bats β traits can emerge many times in evolutionary history.
You can see the shortening of T. rex arms as a pattern in its family tree, as earlier relatives had proportionally longer arms.
How did they use their mini-arms?
Short arms donβt seem to have been a problem for these mighty dinosaurs. T. rex was a successful carnivorous species that existed for over a million years. They only went extinct when an asteroid hit the Earth, causing a global mass extinction.
Scientists have suggested a few ideas to possibly explain how T. rex used their arms. Maybe they were used as some kind of social display that could impress other T. rex β kind of like the bright feathers of a peacock that can attract potential mates.
But male and female T. rex skeletons donβt show the major differences that paleontologists would take as clues that they relied on social displays to attract mates. And while animal behavior can sometimes be preserved, such as in bite marks or fossilized footprints, itβs rare to have enough fossil data to draw clear conclusions.
Maybe T. rex used their arms as weapons to attack or hold down prey. But these options seem unlikely since T. rexβs huge jaws would have made contact with an enemy or prey before the short arms would have been able to reach it.
Some scientists have recently hypothesized that T. rexβs short arms were an adaptation to competition with other carnivores. If multiple predators were feeding on a carcass, one could get hurt by accidental bites or even intentional warning bites for getting too close. Shorter arms would be less likely to get chomped. Similar things occur today with territorial carnivores, like Komodo dragons.
Maybe the arms didnβt have a purpose
Another possibility is that the arms served little or no purpose at all, so over time, they became vestigial. Thatβs the scientific term for body parts that donβt have clear purposes anymore, but are still passed down through evolution.
One example is a whaleβs hindlimbs. Whales evolved from mammals that lived on land that had large legs to move around. The bones are still present in todayβs whales, but have gotten much smaller over millions of years and have no function.
Some scientists have suggested a different idea: T. rexβs arms may have evolved to be smaller as another body part grew larger. The fossil record reveals that arms got shorter as theropod skulls got larger across many different dinosaur groups, including T. rex. Larger skulls likely would have made it easier to hunt and eat larger prey.
Researchers can use mathematical equations to accurately predict theropod arm length if they know the animalβs skull size and length of its upper leg bone, the femur. It turns out that larger skulls are strongly linked to shorter arms in theropods.
The reason for the change in arms, however, isnβt as clear. Some scientists have argued that the smaller arms could have helped with balance as the head got larger, but others arenβt so sure. In evolution, there isnβt always a reason why a change occurs β sometimes, changes just happen. In this case, we donβt yet know if there was a benefit for the arms to get smaller as heads got larger.
So for now, we donβt really know how T. rex used its arms or why they evolved to be so small, proportionally. As scientists find new data, we will continue to test hypotheses to better understand why this tiny-arm trend occurred so many times in theropod evolution. Thatβs what makes science so exciting β a future fossil discovery could be the missing puzzle piece that helps us answer these questions.
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Sarah Sheffield does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.