Researchers: T. rexes may have eaten each other

The skeletal remains of Jane, the prized juvenile Tyrannosaurus rex, sits on exhibit at the Burpee Museum of Natural History in Rockford, Ill., June 28, 2005. A team of researchers reported Friday that huge tooth marks on T. rex bones indicate the ancient giants may have cannibalized one another.

? Tyrannosaurus rex was certainly the king of dinosaurs, but may also have been dinosaur a la king.

A team of researchers reported Friday that huge tooth marks on T. rex bones indicate the ancient giants may have cannibalized one another.

“They’re the kind of marks that any big carnivore could have made, but T. rex was the only big carnivore in western North America 65 million years ago,” Nicholas R. Longrich of Yale University said in a statement.

Longrich and colleagues report their findings in Friday’s edition of the journal PLoS ONE.

They found 17 fossils with deep V-shaped gouges of a type identified as being made by T. rex. Of those, four were remains of T. rex themselves.

It seems likely the marks were made during scavenging from a dead dinosaur, the researchers said.

“It does seem improbable that Tyrannosaurus routinely hunted full-grown members of its own species,” the researchers wrote.

However, they added, it is possible that combat led to casualties, with the dead becoming convenient sources of food for the victors. “Still, compelling evidence for predation in Tyrannosaurus remains elusive.”

Longrich and colleagues note that “cannibalism is common in nature, particularly among large carnivores” such as bears, hyenas, large cats, Komodo dragons and alligators.