Between 2013 and 2017, spinosaurid fossils were uncovered at the beach near the Chilton Chine before being brought to Dinosaur Isle. Such remains had historically been referred to Baryonyx but were understood later to represent two new species.[1]
The
braincase), and IWCMS 2014.96.3 (a partial lacrimal and prefrontal). Referred remains include a posterior nasal fragment (IWCMS 2014.95.7) and a caudal axial series of twenty-two vertebrae (IWCMS 2020.447.1-39), representing around fifty individual bones in total. All of the material was recovered from rocks in the Chilton Chine of the Wessex Formation.[1]
In 2021, the
palaeontologists including Chris T. Barker, David W. E. Hone, Darren Naish, and others. The generic name is derived from the Latinrīpārius, "of the river bank", and vēnātor, "hunter". The specific name honors Angela Milner, deceased in August 2021.[1]
Classification
In their phylogenetic analysis, Barker et al. (2021) recovered Ceratosuchops within the
sister taxon to the coeval Riparovenator. They are, in turn, in a clade containing Suchomimus, which they name Ceratosuchopsini.[1][2]
Allosaurus fragilis. Some of their supposed distinguishing features are also seen in parts of the braincase of Suchomimus, their closest relative. The results of their phylogenetic analysis (with Ceratosuchops and Riparovenator scored together) yielded similar results to those of Barker et al. (2021), with the Wessex baryonychine fossils recovered as the sister taxon to Suchomimus.[3]
Riparovenator lived in a dry Mediterranean habitat in the Wessex Formation, where rivers were home to riparian galleries.[4][5] Like most spinosaurids, it would have fed on aquatic prey as well as other terrestrial prey in these areas.[6][7][8]
Other dinosaurs from the Wessex Formation of the Isle of Wight the theropods Ceratosuchops,
ankylosaur Polacanthus.[9][1] Barker and colleagues stated in 2021 that the identification of the two additional spinosaurids from the Wealden Supergroup, Riparovenator and Ceratosuchops, has implications for potential ecological separation within Spinosauridae if these and Baryonyx were contemporary and interacted. They cautioned that it is possible the Upper Weald Clay and Wessex Formations and the spinosaurids known from them were separated in time and distance.[1]
It is generally thought that large predators occur with small taxonomic diversity in any area due to ecological demands, yet many Mesozoic assemblages include two or more
sympatric theropods that were comparable in size and morphology, and this also appears to have been the case for spinosaurids. Barker and colleagues suggested that high diversity within Spinosauridae in a given area may have been the result of environmental circumstances benefiting their niche. While it has been generally assumed that only identifiable anatomical traits related to resource partitioning allowed for coexistence of large theropods, Barker and colleagues noted that this does not preclude that similar and closely related taxa could coexist and overlap in ecological requirements. Possible niche partitioning could be in time (seasonal or daily), in space (between habitats in the same ecosystems), or depending on conditions, and they could also have been separated by their choice of habitat within their regions (which may have ranged in climate).[1]