When the dinosaurs became extinct, may small bird-like dinosaurs disappeared along with giants like Tyrannosaurus and Triceratops. Why only some of them survived to become modern-day birds remains a mystery.
Researchers suggest that abrupt ecological changes following a meteor impact may have been more detrimental to carnivorous bird-like dinosaurs, and early modern birds with toothless beaks were able to survive on seeds when other food sources declined.
"The small bird-like dinosaurs in the Cretaceous, the maniraptoran dinosaurs, are not a well-understood group," said Derek Larson, a paleontologist at the Philip J Currie Dinosaur Museum in Canada.
The researchers began by studying whether the extinction at the end of the Cretaceous was an abrupt event or a progressive decline simply capped off by the meteor impact.
The fossil record holds evidence to support both scenarios, depending on which dinosaurs are being examined.
Delving into the bird-like dinosaurs, Larson collected data describing 3,104 fossilised teeth from four different maniraptoran families.
The data indicated a rich and stable ecosystem over millions of years and suggested that these bird-like dinosaurs were abruptly killed off by an event at the end of the Cretaceous period.
The team suspected that diet might have played a part in the survival of the lineage that produced today's birds, and they used dietary information and previously published group relationships from modern-day birds to infer what their ancestors might have eaten.
Researchers hypothesised that the last common ancestor of today's birds was a toothless seed eater with a beak.
The strike would have affected sun-dependent leaf and fruit production in plants, but hardy seeds could have been a food source until other options became available again.
The study was published in the journal Current Biology.
