Updated on 2024/12/26

写真a

 
KUBO, Tai
 
Affiliation
Affiliated organization, Center for Data Science
Job title
Assistant Professor(non-tenure-track)
Degree
理学博士 ( 東京大学 )

Research Experience

  • 2024.04
    -
    Now

    Waseda University   Center for Data Science   Assistant Professor

  • 2022.10
    -
    2024.04

    Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate University   Marine Macroevolution Unit   Stuff Scientist

Research Areas

  • Biogeosciences

Research Interests

  • Vertebrate Paleontology

Awards

  • PSJ Academic Award

    2024.02   The Palaeontological Society of Japa  

  • 研究奨励賞

    2021.06   日本進化学会  

 

Papers

  • Biogeographical Network Analysis of Cretaceous Terrestrial Tetrapods: A Phylogeny-Based Approach

    Tai Kubo

    Systematic Biology    2019  [Refereed]

    Authorship:Lead author, Last author, Corresponding author

    DOI

    Scopus

    6
    Citation
    (Scopus)
  • Transitions between foot postures are associated with elevated rates of body size evolution in mammals.

    Kubo T, Sakamoto M, Meade A, Venditti C

    Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America    2019.01  [Refereed]

    Authorship:Lead author, Corresponding author

    DOI PubMed

    Scopus

    18
    Citation
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  • Nonplantigrade Foot Posture: A Constraint on Dinosaur Body Size

    Tai Kubo, Mugino O. Kubo

    PLOS ONE   11 ( 1 ) e0145716  2016.01  [Refereed]

    Authorship:Lead author, Corresponding author

     View Summary

    Dinosaurs had functionally digitigrade or sub-unguligrade foot postures. With their immediate ancestors, dinosaurs were the only terrestrial nonplantigrades during the Mesozoic. Extant terrestrial mammals have different optimal body sizes according to their foot posture (plantigrade, digitigrade, and unguligrade), yet the relationship of nonplantigrade foot posture with dinosaur body size has never been investigated, even though the body size of dinosaurs has been studied intensively. According to a large dataset presented in this study, the body sizes of all nonplantigrades (including nonvolant dinosaurs, nonvolant terrestrial birds, extant mammals, and extinct Nearctic mammals) are above 500 g, except for macroscelid mammals (i.e., elephant shrew), a few alvarezsauroid dinosaurs, and nondinosaur ornithodirans (i.e., the immediate ancestors of dinosaurs). When nonplantigrade tetrapods evolved from plantigrade ancestors, lineages with nonplantigrade foot posture exhibited a steady increase in body size following Cope's rule. In contrast, contemporaneous plantigrade lineages exhibited no trend in body size evolution and were largely constrained to small body sizes. This evolutionary pattern of body size specific to foot posture occurred repeatedly during both the Mesozoic and the Cenozoic eras. Although disturbed by the end-Cretaceous extinction, species of mid to large body size have predominantly been nonplantigrade animals from the Jurassic until the present; conversely, species with small body size have been exclusively composed of plantigrades in the nonvolant terrestrial tetrapod fauna.

    DOI PubMed

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    7
    Citation
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  • ALBERTONECTES VANDERVELDEI, A NEW ELASMOSAUR (REPTILIA, SAUROPTERYGIA) FROM THE UPPER CRETACEOUS OF ALBERTA

    Tai Kubo, Mark T. Mitchell, Donald M. Henderson

    JOURNAL OF VERTEBRATE PALEONTOLOGY   32 ( 3 ) 557 - 572  2012  [Refereed]

    Authorship:Lead author, Corresponding author

     View Summary

    A new elasmosaurid plesiosaur, Albertonectes vanderveldei, gen. et sp. nov., is described on the basis of an almost complete postcranial skeleton from the upper Campanian, Bearpaw Formation in Alberta, Canada. The new taxon is distinguished by a unique set of characters-76 cervicals, lateral longitudinal ridge on posterior-most cervicals, relatively wide clavicular arch, tapered ventral projection at the median symphysis of coracoids, pointed anterolateral projection of pubis, fused posterior-most caudal vertebrae, and a relatively slender humerus. Ninety-seven chert gastroliths were also recovered with the specimen, and their mean diameters range from <1 to 13.5 cm. Shape analysis indicates that most of the gastroliths were ingested in the vicinity of a beach environment. Evidence that the carcass was scavenged by sharks includes a tooth-marked coracoid, two shed Squalicorax sp. teeth, and small, localized disruptions to the skeleton. Preliminary phylogenetic analysis confirms the inclusion of Albertonectes in a clade comprised of 'middle' to Late Cretaceous, long-necked elasmosaurid plesiosaurs. The number of cervical vertebrae associated with different elasmosaur genera does not show any correlation with phylogeny. Both neck and total body length of Albertonectes are the longest among known elasmosaurs, and highlight the morphological extremes attained by this group of plesiosaurs.

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    81
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  • TETRAPOD POSTURAL SHIFT ESTIMATED FROM PERMIAN AND TRIASSIC TRACKWAYS

    Tai Kubo, Michael J. Benton

    PALAEONTOLOGY   52 ( 5 ) 1029 - 1037  2009.09  [Refereed]

    Authorship:Lead author, Corresponding author

     View Summary

    The end-Permian mass extinction, 252 million years (myr) ago, marks a major shift in the posture of tetrapods. Before the mass extinction, terrestrial tetrapods were sprawlers, walking with their limbs extended to the sides; after the event, most large tetrapods had adopted an erect posture with their limbs tucked under the body. This shift had been suspected from the study of skeletal fossils, but had been documented as a long process that occupied some 15-20 myr of the Triassic. This study reads posture directly from fossil tracks, using a clear criterion for sprawling vs erect posture. The track record is richer than the skeletal record, especially for the Early and Middle Triassic intervals, the critical 20 myr during which period the postural shift occurred. The shift to erect posture was completed within the 6 myr of the Early Triassic and affected both lineages of medium to large tetrapods of the time, the diapsids and synapsids.

    DOI

    Scopus

    56
    Citation
    (Scopus)
  • Dental microwear texture analysis reveals a likely dietary shift within Late Cretaceous ornithopod dinosaurs

    Tai Kubo, Mugino O. Kubo, Manabu Sakamoto, Daniela E. Winkler, Masateru Shibata, Wenjie Zheng, Xingsheng Jin, Hai‐Lu You

    Palaeontology    2023.11  [Refereed]

    Authorship:Lead author, Corresponding author

    DOI

    Scopus

    3
    Citation
    (Scopus)
  • First application of dental microwear texture analysis to infer theropod feeding ecology

    Daniela E. Winkler, Tai Kubo, Mugino O. Kubo, Thomas M. Kaiser, Thomas Tuetken

    PALAEONTOLOGY   65 ( 6 )  2022.11  [Refereed]

     View Summary

    Theropods were the dominating apex predators in most Jurassic and Cretaceous terrestrial ecosystems. Their feeding ecology has always been of great interest, and new computational methods have yielded more detailed reconstructions of differences in theropod feeding behaviour. Many approaches, however, rely on well-preserved skulls. Dental microwear texture (DMT) analysis is potentially applicable to isolated teeth, and here employed for the first time to investigate dietary ecology of theropods. In particular, we test whether tyrannosaurids show DMT associated with more hard-object feeding than compared to Allosaurus; this would be a sign for higher levels of osteophagy, as has often been suggested. We find no significant difference in complexity and roughness of enamel surfaces between Allosaurus and tyrannosaurids, which conflicts with inferences of more frequent osteophagic behaviour in Tyrannosaurus as compared to other theropods. Orientation of wear features reveals a more pronounced bi-directional puncture-and-pull feeding mode in Allosaurus than in tyrannosaurids. Our results further indicate ontogenetic niche shift in theropods and crocodylians, based on significantly larger height parameters in juvenile theropods which might indicate frequent scavenging, resulting in more bone-tooth contact during feeding. Overall, DMT is found to be very similar between theropods and extant large, broad-snouted crocodylians and shows great similarity in feeding ecology of theropod apex predators throughout the Jurassic and Cretaceous.

    DOI

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    6
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  • Controlled feeding experiments with juvenile alligators reveal microscopic dental wear texture patterns associated with hard-object feeding

    Daniela E. Winkler, Masaya Iijima, Richard W. Blob, Tai Kubo, Mugino O. Kubo

    Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution   10  2022.10  [Refereed]

     View Summary

    Dental wear analyses are classically applied to mammals because they have evolved heterodont dentitions for sophisticated mastication. Recently, several studies have shown a correlation between pre-assigned and analytically inferred diet preferences in extant reptiles through dental microwear texture analysis (DMTA), a method using quantitative assessment of microscopic wear marks to reconstruct the diet material properties. The first tentative applications of DMTA to extinct reptiles have followed. However, for large and small mammals, microwear analyses have undergone a long time of ground-truthing through direct feeding observations, stomach content analyses, and feeding experiments. Such data are currently lacking for reptiles, but are necessary to further extend DMTA, especially to Archosauria, as the application to dinosaurs could be of great interest to the scientific community. We herein present data from a pilot feeding experiment with five juvenile American alligators (Alligator mississippiensis). Each individual received a diet of assumed different hardness for ~4 months: crocodylian pellets (control), sardines, quails, rats, or crawfish. All individuals initially received the same pellet diet, and we found them to show similar dental microwear texture patterns before they were switched to their designated experimental diet. From the first feeding bout on, dental microwear textures differed across the diets. The crawfish-feeder showed consistently higher surface complexity, followed by the rat-feeder. Quail- and fish-feeding resulted in similar wear signatures, with low complexity. Fast tooth replacement and selective tooth use likely affected microwear formation, but we were able to detect a general hard (crawfish and rat) versus soft (quail and fish) DMTA signature. Such patterns can support the identification of hard-object feeding in the fossil record.

    DOI

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    3
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  • Microwear textures associated with experimental near-natural diets suggest that seeds and hard insect body parts cause high enamel surface complexity in small mammals

    Daniela E. Winkler, Marcus Clauss, Mugino O. Kubo, Ellen Schulz-Kornas, Thomas M. Kaiser, Anja Tschudin, Annelies De Cuyper, Tai Kubo, Thomas Tuetken

    FRONTIERS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION   10  2022.09  [Refereed]

     View Summary

    In mammals, complex dental microwear textures (DMT) representing differently sized and shaped enamel lesions overlaying each other have traditionally been associated with the seeds and kernels in frugivorous diets, as well as with sclerotized insect cuticles. Recently, this notion has been challenged by field observations as well as in vitro experimental data. It remains unclear to what extent each food item contributes to the complexity level and is reflected by the surface texture of the respective tooth position along the molar tooth row. To clarify the potential of seeds and other abrasive dietary items to cause complex microwear textures, we conducted a controlled feeding experiment with rats. Six individual rats each received either a vegetable mix, a fruit mix, a seed mix, whole crickets, whole black soldier fly larvae, or whole day-old-chicks. These diets were subjected to material testing to obtain mechanical properties, such as Young's modulus, yield strength, and food hardness (as indicated by texture profile analysis [TPA] tests). Seeds and crickets caused the highest surface complexity. The fruit mix, seed mix, and crickets caused the deepest wear features. Moreover, several diets resulted in an increasing wear gradient from the first to the second molar, suggesting that increasing bite force along the tooth row affects dental wear in rats on these diets. Mechanical properties of the diets showed different correlations with DMT obtained for the first and second molars. The first molar wear was mostly correlated with maximum TPA hardness, while the second molar wear was strongly correlated with maximum yield stress, mean TPA hardness, and maximum TPA hardness. This indicates a complex relationship between chewing mechanics, food mechanical properties, and observed DMT. Our results show that, in rats, seeds are the main cause of complex microwear textures but that hard insect body parts can also cause high complexity. However, the similarity in parameter values of surface textures resulting from seed and cricket consumption did not allow differentiation between these two diets in our experimental approach.

    DOI

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    6
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    (Scopus)
  • Non-occlusal dental microwear texture analysis of a titanosauriform sauropod dinosaur from the Upper Cretaceous (Turonian) Tamagawa Formation, northeastern Japan

    Homare Sakaki, Daniela E. Winkler, Tai Kubo, Ren Hirayama, Hikaru Uno, Shinya Miyata, Hideki Endo, Kazuhisa Sasaki, Toshio Takisawa, Mugino O. Kubo

    Cretaceous Research   136   105218 - 105218  2022.03  [Refereed]

    Authorship:Corresponding author

    DOI

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    10
    Citation
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  • Dental microwear of a basal ankylosaurine dinosaur, Jinyunpelta and its implication on evolution of chewing mechanism in ankylosaurs

    Tai Kubo, Wenjie Zheng, Mugino O. Kubo, Xingsheng Jin

    PLOS ONE   16 ( 3 ) e0247969 - e0247969  2021.03  [Refereed]

     View Summary

    <italic>Jinyunpelta sinensis</italic> is a basal ankylosaurine dinosaur excavated from the mid Cretaceous Liangtoutang Formation of Jinyun County, Zhejiang Province, China. In the present study, its dental microwear was observed using a confocal laser microscope. <italic>Jinyunpelta</italic> had steep wear facets that covered most of buccal surfaces of posterior dentary teeth. Observation of dental microwear on the wear facet revealed that scratch orientation varied according to its location within the wear facet: vertically (i.e. apicobasally) oriented scratches were dominant in the upper half of the wear facet, and horizontally (i.e. mesiolaterally) oriented ones were in the bottom of the facet. These findings indicated that <italic>Jinyunpelta</italic> adopted precise tooth occlusion and biphasal jaw movement (orthal closure and palinal lower jaw movement). The biphasal jaw movement was widely observed among nodosaurids, among ankylosaurids, it was previously only known from the Late Cretaceous North American taxa, and not known among Asian ankylosaurids. The finding of biphasal jaw movement in <italic>Jinyunpelta</italic> showed sophisticate feeding adaptations emerged among ankylosaurids much earlier (during Albian or Cenomanian) than previously thought (during Campanian). The Evolution of the biphasal jaw mechanism that contemporaneously occurred among two lineages of ankylosaurs, ankylosaurids and nodosaurids, showed high evolutionary plasticity of ankylosaur jaw mechanics.

    DOI PubMed

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    3
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  • Vertebrae-based body length estimation in crocodylians and its implication for sexual maturity and the maximum sizes

    Masaya Iijima, Tai Kubo

    Integrative Organismal Biology    2020.11  [Refereed]

     View Summary

    <jats:title>Abstract</jats:title>
    <jats:p>Body size is fundamental to the physiology and ecology of organisms. Crocodyliforms are no exception, and several methods have been developed to estimate their absolute body sizes from bone measurements. However, species-specific sizes, such as sexually mature sizes and the maximum sizes were not taken into account due to the challenging maturity assessment of osteological specimens. Here, we provide a vertebrae-based method to estimate absolute and species-specific body lengths in crocodylians. Lengths of cervical to anterior caudal centra were measured and relations between the body lengths (snout-vent and total lengths) and lengths of either a single centrum or a series of centra were modeled for extant species. Additionally, states of neurocentral suture closure were recorded for the maturity assessment. Comparisons of total lengths and timings of neurocentral suture closure showed that most extant crocodylians reach sexual maturity before closure of precaudal neurocentral sutures. Centrum lengths of the smallest individuals with closed precaudal neurocentral sutures within species were correlated with the species maximum total lengths in extant taxa; therefore, the upper or lower limit of the species maximum sizes can be determined from centrum lengths and states of neurocentral suture closure. The application of the current method to non-crocodylian crocodyliforms requires similar numbers of precaudal vertebrae, body proportions, and timings of neurocentral suture closure as compared to extant crocodylians.</jats:p>

    DOI

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    9
    Citation
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  • Intervertebral joint polarity reversions in extant and extinct crocodylians

    Masaya Iijima, Tai Kubo

    Acta Zoologica    2020.08  [Refereed]

    DOI

    Scopus

  • Biogeographical network analysis of Cretaceous Australian dinosaurs

    Tai Kubo

    Gondwana Research    2020.06  [Refereed]

    Authorship:Lead author, Last author, Corresponding author

    DOI

    Scopus

    5
    Citation
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  • Allometric growth of limb and body proportions in crocodylians

    Iijima M, Kubo T

    JOURNAL OF ZOOLOGY    2019.07  [Refereed]

    DOI

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    10
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  • Comparative morphology of presacral vertebrae in extant crocodylians: taxonomic, functional and ecological implications

    Masaya Iijima, Tai Kubo

    Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society    2019.02  [Refereed]

    DOI

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    18
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  • Comparative limb proportions reveal differential locomotor morphofunctions of alligatoroids and crocodyloids

    Masaya Iijima, Tai Kubo, Yoshitsugu Kobayashi

    Royal Society Open Science   5 ( 3 ) 171774.  2018.03  [Refereed]

     View Summary

    Although two major clades of crocodylians (Alligatoroidea and Crocodyloidea) were split during the Cretaceous period, relatively few morphological and functional differences between them have been known. In addition, interaction of multiple morphofunctional systems that differentiated their ecology has barely been assessed. In this study, we examined the limb proportions of crocodylians to infer the differences of locomotor functions between alligatoroids and crocodyloids, and tested the correlation of locomotor and feeding morphofunctions. Our analyses revealed crocodyloids including Gavialis have longer stylopodia (humerus and femur) than alligatoroids, indicating that two groups may differ in locomotor functions. Fossil evidence suggested that alligatoroids have retained short stylopodia since the early stage of their evolution. Furthermore, rostral shape, an indicator of trophic function, is correlated with limb proportions, where slender-snouted piscivorous taxa have relatively long stylopodia and short overall limbs. In combination, trophic and locomotor functionsmight differently delimit the ecological opportunity of alligatoroids and crocodyloids in the evolution of crocodylians.

    DOI PubMed

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    24
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  • The earliest record of Asian Eusuchia from the Lower Cretaceous Khok Kruat Formation of northeastern Thailand

    Tai Kubo, Masateru Shibata, Wilailuck Naksri, Pratueng Jintasakul, Yoichi Azuma

    CRETACEOUS RESEARCH   82   21 - 28  2018.02  [Refereed]

    Authorship:Lead author, Corresponding author

     View Summary

    We describe remains of a new crocodyliform found from the Lower Cretaceous (Aptian) Khok Kruat Formation, northeastern Thailand. Remains consist of two caudal ends of mandibles, two rostra( symphyseal parts of right rami of mandibles, a dorsal part of postorbital, a cranial end of squamosal and one osteoderm. Phylogenetic analyses supported inclusion of this crocodyliform into the Eusuchia as it share's several morphological characters with other eusuchians, such as a dorsocaudally oriented retroarticular process, smooth lateral surface of the caudoventral region of mandible, and a craniocaudally oriented ridge on the dorsal surface of retroarticular process. The shape of symphyseal region showed this crocodyliform had a longirostrine snout shape, which is uncommon in early eusuchians. Finding of this crocodyliform draws back the oldest record of Asian eusuchians, which was Tadzhikosuchus, approximately 30 million years and it is the only Mesozoic eusuchian found in East and Southeast Asia. (C) 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

    DOI

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    12
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  • Three-dimensional tooth surface texture analysis on stall-fed and wild boars (Sus scrofa).

    Yamada E, Kubo MO, Kubo T, Kohno N

    PloS one   13 ( 10 ) e0204719  2018  [Refereed]

     View Summary

    Categorizing the archaeological remains of Sus scrofa as domesticated "pigs" or wild "boars" is often difficult because of their morphological and genetic similarities. For this purpose, we tested whether feeding ecological change of S. scrofa that accompanied their domestication can be detected based on the three-dimensional texture created on the tooth enamel surface by mastication. We scanned the lower tooth surface of one wild and one stall-fed populations of modern S. s. leucomystax and one wild population of S. s. riukiuanus by using a confocal laser microscope. The average body weight of S. s. leucomystax is twice as heavier as that of S. s. riukiuanus. The textures were quantified using the industrial "roughness" standard, ISO 25178, to prevent inter-observer errors and to distinguish small differences that were difficult to detect by two dimensional image observation. The values of parameters related to height and volume were significantly larger in the stall-fed population. Twenty parameters differed significantly between the stall-fed and wild population of S. s. leucomystax, which indicated that the feeding ecological difference affected the ISO parameters of the two boar populations. Six parameters also differed between the wild populations of S. s. leucomystax and S. s. riukiuanus. Surprisingly, no parameter differed between the populations of stall-fed S. s. leucomystax and wild S. s. riukiuanus. Consumption of hard nuts and/or agricultural fruits and crops by the wild population of S. s. riukiuanus may have produced a tooth surface texture similar to that of the stall-fed population of S. s. leucomystax. Further analysis of S. s. riukiuanus with a known diet is necessary to conclude whether ISO parameters reflect the dietary transition accompanying the domestication of Sus (e.g., wild, semi-domestic, and domestic). Until then, caution is needed in discriminating domesticated populations from wild populations that mainly feed on hard objects.

    DOI PubMed

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    15
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  • Dental microwear texture analysis of extant sika deer with considerations on inter-microscope variability and surface preparation protocols.

    Kubo, M. O, Yamada, E, Kubo, T, Kohno, N

    Biosurface and Biotribology   3   155 - 165  2017.12  [Refereed]

    DOI

  • Masticatory jaw movement of Exaeretodon argentinus (Therapsida: Cynodontia) inferred from its dental microwear

    Tai Kubo, Eisuke Yamada, Mugino O. Kubo

    PLOS ONE   12 ( 11 ) e0188023  2017.11  [Refereed]

    Authorship:Lead author, Corresponding author

     View Summary

    Dental microwear of four postcanine teeth of Exaeretodon argentinus was analyzed using both two dimensional (2D) and three dimensional (3D) methods to infer their masticatory jaw movements. Results of both methods were congruent, showing that linear microwear features (scratches) were well aligned and mostly directed to the antero-posterior direction in all four teeth examined. These findings support the palinal masticatory jaw movement, which was inferred in previous studies based on the observation of gross morphology of wear facets. In contrast, the lack of detection of lateral scratches confirmed the absence of the lateral jaw movement that was also proposed by a previous study. Considering previous microwear studies on cynodonts, palinal jaw movements observed in Exaeretodon evolved within cynognathian cynodonts from the fully orthal jaw movement of its basal member. Although there are currently only three studies of dental microwear of non-mammalian cynodonts including the present study, microwear analysis is a useful tool for the reconstruction of masticatory jaw movement and its future application to various cynodonts will shed light on the evolutionary process of jaw movement towards the mammalian condition in more detail.

    DOI PubMed

  • Reconstruction of feeding ecology based on tooth microwear: historical review and recent progress using three dimensional microtexture analysis

    Yamada Eisuke, Kubo Mugino O, Kubo Tai, Kohno Naoki

    Fossils   102 ( 0 ) 73 - 85  2017  [Refereed]

    CiNii

  • Dental microwear of a Late Triassic dinosauriform, Silesaurus opolensis

    Tai Kubo, Mugino O. Kubo

    ACTA PALAEONTOLOGICA POLONICA   59 ( 2 ) 305 - 312  2014  [Refereed]

    Authorship:Lead author, Corresponding author

     View Summary

    Silesaurus opolensis belongs to Silesauridae, the closest sister group to dinosaurs. The present study analyzed the dental microwear patterns of Silesaurus opolensis. Low pit-to-scratch ratios imply they did not feed on hard objects. Unimodal distributions of both wear-facet and non-facet scratch orientations indicate simple orthal jaw movement. Scratch orientation and density differ between microscopic regions in Silesaurus, and unlike hadrosaurid dinosaurs, the microwear patterns of small areas are not identical to those of whole teeth.

    DOI

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    14
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  • A biogeographical analysis of the Early Cretaceous dinosaurs including dinosaurs from Fukui, Japan using Tree Reconciliation analysis

    久保 泰

    福井県立恐竜博物館紀要   ( 13 ) 1 - 7  2014  [Refereed]

    Authorship:Lead author, Last author, Corresponding author

    CiNii

  • Analysis of triassic archosauriform trackways: Difference in stride/foot ratio between dinosauromorphs and other archosauriforms

    Tai Kubo, Mugino O. Kubo

    Palaios   28 ( 4 ) 259 - 265  2013.04  [Refereed]

    Authorship:Lead author, Corresponding author

     View Summary

    Fossilized trackways have rarely been analyzed quantitatively to examine major trends and patterns in evolution despite their potential utility, especially in understanding locomotory evolution. In the present study, trackways of Triassic archosauriforms were analyzed. The analyses showed foot and stride lengths of archosauriforms increased from the Early to Middle Triassic, especially those of dinosauromorphs, which tripled. Dinosauromorphs were much smaller in foot length and stride length compared to other archosauriforms during the Early Triassic. They reached similar stride length compared with other archosauriforms during the Middle Triassic and similar foot length in the Late Triassic. Stride/foot ratio is significantly higher in dinosauromorphs compared to other archosauriforms throughout the Triassic. This relatively long stride length of dinosauromorphs is attributed to either faster speed or higher relative hip height that was probably caused by their digitigrade foot posture. Analyses of trackway data sets, especially in combination with precise trackmaker assignment and age determination, would bring us more thorough knowledge about locomotory evolution of tetrapods that complements body fossil evidence. © 2013 SEPM (Society for Sedimentary Geology).

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    9
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  • Associated evolution of bipedality and cursoriality among Triassic archosaurs: A phylogenetically controlled evaluation

    Tai Kubo, Mugino O. Kubo

    Paleobiology   38 ( 3 ) 474 - 485  2012.06  [Refereed]

    Authorship:Lead author, Corresponding author

     View Summary

    Bipedalism evolved more than twice among archosaurs, and it is a characteristic of basal dinosaurs and a prerequisite for avian flight. Nevertheless, the reasons for the evolution of bipedalism among archosaurs have barely been investigated. Comparative analysis using phylogenetically independent contrasts showed a significant correlation between bipedality (relative length of forelimb) and cursoriality (relative length of metatarsal III) among Triassic archosaurs. This result indicates that, among Triassic archosaurs, bipeds could run faster than quadrupeds. Bipedalism is probably an adaptation for cursoriality among archosaurs, which may explain why bipedalism evolved convergently in the crocodilian and bird lineages. This result also indicates that the means of acquiring cursoriality may differ between archosaurs and mammals. © 2012 The Paleontological Society. All rights reserved.

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  • Estimating body weight from footprints: Application to pterosaurs

    Tai Kubo

    PALAEOGEOGRAPHY PALAEOCLIMATOLOGY PALAEOECOLOGY   299 ( 1-2 ) 197 - 199  2011.01  [Refereed]

    Authorship:Lead author, Corresponding author

     View Summary

    The body mass of extinct animals have never been estimated from footprints, despite its potential utility. To redeem this situation, the relationship between body mass and the areas of footprints was derived from 17 species of modern tetrapods. Body mass of seven ichnospecies of pterosaur tracks were estimated, because pterosaur body weight is an intriguing topic with reference to their flying ability. Estimated body weights of pterosaurs range from 110 g to 145 kg. The result provides evidence that large pterosaurs are about 10 times heavier than the heaviest modern bird. (C) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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    11
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  • Evolution of bipedality and herbivory among Triassic dinosauromorphs

    久保 泰

    福井県立恐竜博物館紀要   0 ( 10 ) 55 - 62  2011  [Refereed]

    Authorship:Lead author, Last author, Corresponding author

    CiNii

  • 島根県松江市美保関町の下部中新統古浦層より発見された陸生脊椎動物(予報)

    河野重範, 平山廉, 薗田哲平, 高橋亮雄, 久保泰, 酒井哲弥, 高井正成, 荻野慎太郎, 高桑祐司, 青木良輔, 入月俊明

    化石研究会会誌   42   95 - 102  2010  [Refereed]

  • Variation in modern crocodilian limb kinematics and its effect on trackways.

    Tai Kubo

    New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin   51   51 - 53  2010  [Refereed]

    Authorship:Lead author, Last author, Corresponding author

  • Extant Lizard Tracks: Variation and Implications for Paleoichnology

    Tai Kubo

    ICHNOS-AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR PLANT AND ANIMAL TRACES   17 ( 3 ) 187 - 196  2010  [Refereed]

    Authorship:Lead author, Last author, Corresponding author

     View Summary

    In this study, I collected tracks and trackways from nine species of extant lizards representing all five major lizard clades. Previously, tracks from species of only two of these clades were described. Lizard tracks conventionally are regarded as having curved digit imprints that progressively increase in length from digit I to IV, with a smaller digit V directing antero-laterally. However, the zygodactylous feet of chameleons (Calumma parsonii and Furcifer pardalis), the posteriorly directed digit V in the pes of ground-dwelling geckos (Eublepharis macularius) and the rounded feet of blue-tongued skinks (Tiliqua scincoides) did not make otypicalo lizard tracks, and demonstrate that even within a limited taxonomic sample there can be considerable variation in the morphologies of lizard tracks. Among the lizards examined, mode of locomotion and how the feet function have more influence on the morphology of tracks than does the phylogenetic affinities of the trackmaker. This preliminary neoichnological study increases the known variation in lizard tracks and aids in interpreting the fossil trackway record by providing comparative information that can be used to identify fossil tracks made by lizards.

    DOI

    Scopus

    14
    Citation
    (Scopus)
  • Does pace angulation correlate with limb posture?

    Tai Kubo, Mugino Ozaki

    PALAEOGEOGRAPHY PALAEOCLIMATOLOGY PALAEOECOLOGY   275 ( 1-4 ) 54 - 58  2009.05  [Refereed]

    Authorship:Lead author, Corresponding author

     View Summary

    Femoral abduction angle, pelvic rotation angle and motion speed of eight species of modem crocodiles and lizards were measured to determine the factors affecting pace angulation and to assess whether limb posture can be estimated from trackways. Film sequences of dorsal views of free walking reptiles were filmed with a digital video camera recorder, then positions of the ankle, knee and hip joints were digitized and x-y coordinates were obtained for each of the half frames. Pace angulation and abduction angle of the supporting femur were calculated from the coordinates, together with motion speed and pelvic rotation. Multiple stepwise regression analysis showed that the femoral abduction angle was the most influential factor. explaining 47% of the variation in pace angulation value. The parameter estimate for the femoral abduction angle (-0.71) indicates that an animal with a more erect limb posture (i.e., lower femur abduction angle) makes a trackway with a higher pace angulation. Pelvic rotation also contributed significantly to the model, whereas motion speed did not. By inverse prediction, a trackway with an average pace angulation value of 108 degrees or less is unlikely to have been produced by an animal with a fully erect gait. A major implication of our study is that limb posture of extinct tetrapods can be reconstructed from fossilized trackways. Fossil trackways are an important source of information about posture. Analyses of fossilized trackways can complement information obtained from body fossils or, in case where body fossils are rare or lacking, fossilized trackways may be the primary source of information about posture, locomotion and behavior. (c) 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

    DOI

    Scopus

    23
    Citation
    (Scopus)
  • In quest of the Pteraichnus trackmaker: Comparisons to modern crocodilians

    Tai Kubo

    Acta Palaeontologica Polonica   53 ( 3 ) 405 - 412  2008  [Refereed]

    Authorship:Lead author, Last author, Corresponding author

     View Summary

    The Pteraichnus trackmaker is usually hypothesized to be either a pterosaur or a crocodilian. Though the latter interpretation is recently not widely accepted, more experimental work on trackways of extant crocodilians is necessary to settle the debate. Here, the trackways of three species of modern crocodiles (Paleosuchus trigonatus, Crocodylus porosus, and Tomistoma schlegelii) in all major gaits and postures, namely sprawling, walking and running, were compared with Pteraichnus trackways. In all experimentally generated crocodilian trackways pentadactyl manus tracks are recognized, the external width between pes tracks is wider than the corresponding internal width between manus tracks, and tail marks are usually present. All crocodilian trackways collected in the present study revealed significant differences from Pteraichnus, which strongly suggests a non-crocodilian origin of Pteraichnus.

    DOI

    Scopus

    24
    Citation
    (Scopus)
  • Evolution of hindlimb posture in archosaurs: Limb stresses in extinct vertebrates

    Tai Kubo, Michael J. Benton

    PALAEONTOLOGY   50 ( 6 ) 1519 - 1529  2007.11  [Refereed]

    Authorship:Lead author, Corresponding author

     View Summary

    During the Triassic, some 250-200 million years ago, the basal archosaurs showed a transition from sprawling to erect posture. Past studies focused on changes in bone morphology, especially on the joints, as they reorientated from a sprawling to an erect posture. Here we introduce a biomechanical model to estimate the magnitude of femur stress in different postures, in order to determine the most reasonable postures for five basal archosaurs along the line to crocodiliforms (the rhynchosaur Stenaulorhynchus, the basal archosaur Erythrosuchus, the &apos;rauisuchian&apos; Batrachotomus, the aetosaurs Desmatosuchus and Typothorax). The results confirm a sprawling posture in basal taxa and an erect posture in derived taxa. Erect posture may have evolved as a strategy to reduce large bending stresses on the limb bone caused by heavy body weights in larger forms.

    DOI

    Scopus

    31
    Citation
    (Scopus)

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Books and Other Publications

  • コーウェン地球生命史 第6版

    ロバート ジェンキンズ, 久保 泰( Part: Joint translator)

    東京化学同人  2023.07 ISBN: 9784807920488

  • 古生物学の百科事典

    日本古生物学会( Part: Contributor, 「適応」「三畳紀の主竜形類と恐竜類の起源」)

    丸善出版  2023.01 ISBN: 9784621307588

  • 日経サイエンス9月号

    久保 泰( Part: Supervisor (editorial), 「恐竜たちの走りを再考する」)

    日経サイエンス社  2019

  • UMUTオープンラボ:東京大学総合研究博物館常設展展示図録.

    久保 泰( Part: Contributor, p.17, pp.68-75.)

    東京大学出版会  2016

  • 地球46億年の旅 24号

    久保 泰( Part: Supervisor (editorial), 「翼竜の進化.」 pp.4-5)

    朝日新聞出版  2014

  • 地球46億年の旅 22号

    久保 泰( Part: Supervisor (editorial), 「空を飛んだ脊椎動物.」pp. 20-25)

    朝日新聞出版  2014

  • これならわかる!クイズ式 たのしい恐竜学

    東洋一, 柴田正輝, 久保泰, 関谷透執筆, 福井県立恐竜博物館, こどもくらぶ( Part: Joint author)

    今人舎  2013

  • 東大古生物学 化石からみる生命史

    久保 泰( Part: Contributor, 足跡からわかること.pp 340-345)

    東海大学出版会  2012

  • 翼竜の謎―恐竜が見あげた「竜」 平成24年度特別展図録

    久保 泰( Part: Sole author)

    福井県立恐竜博物館  2012

  • 巨大絶滅動物 マチカネワニ化石

    小林快次, 江口太郎( Part: Contributor, マレーガビアルの歩き方 pp 80-81)

    大阪大学出版会  2010

  • 恐竜学,進化と絶滅の謎.

    真鍋真 監訳, 藤原慎一, 平沢達矢, 久保泰 共訳( Part: Joint translator, 1-5章)

    丸善  2006

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Research Projects

  • Development of a paleodietary reconstruciton method for crocodilians through feeding experiments and its application to extinct crocodillians

    Japan Society for the Promotion of Science  Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research Grant-in-Aid for Challenging Research (Exploratory)

    Project Year :

    2022.06
    -
    2024.03
     

  • 歯の微細摂食痕の三次元解析から探る、哺乳類特有の咀嚼運動の起源と進化

    日本学術振興会  科学研究費助成事業 特別研究員奨励費

    Project Year :

    2019.04
    -
    2022.03
     

    久保 泰

     View Summary

    本研究ではマイクロウェア(歯に残る摂食時の微細な痕)の三次元的解析により哺乳類等の食性進化を解明する事を目指している。二ホンジカや二ホンカモシカ、あるいは二ホンイノシシを用いた研究により、マイクロウェアの深さが摂食物中のイネ科の割合と相関する事が明確となり、その成果は複数の国際学会で発表した。
    三畳紀に生息した海生爬虫類の板歯類のマイクロウェアの研究も進め、現生サメやジュゴンのマイクロウェアとの比較を行った。板歯類の歯の凹凸は歯が平らなジュゴンや砂地で暮らすサメと、歯がでこぼこしている岩礁で暮らすサメ等のちょうど中間に位置する事が明らかとなった。この成果も国際学会で発表したが、板歯類が中間的な位置を占めるのが生息地の影響なのか食性の影響なのかが判然とせず、比較のための追加の四足動物の分析が必要である。
    同時に恐竜のマイクロウェアの研究も進めており、中国や国内それぞれ複数の研究機関で歯型の採取を行った。また三畳紀の初期の恐竜のマイクロウェアの分析も進めた。三畳紀の恐竜は、一部の肉食性のもので線状の傷が確認されたが、総じて保存が悪く、歯の概形から推定される食性とマイクロウェアの関連性を明らかにするには至らなかった。
    また共同研究として現生ワニの研究を進めている。種によって肢骨の形成パターンに違いがあるかについて検討し、これまで種間であまり差が無いと考えられていた肢骨の相対成長には種間で違いがある事。ガビアルの仲間が特異な成長様式を示すこと。前肢と後肢の成長パターンの比較だけからは成長と共に二足歩行から四足歩行へあるいは四足歩行から二足歩行への変化があるかを明言できない事などを明らかにすることができた。

  • 大学博物館で触れる標本研究

    日本学術振興会  研究成果公開促進費

    Project Year :

     
    -
    2021.03
     

  • The evolution of mammalian jaw mastication: applying the dental microwear texture analysis

    Japan Society for the Promotion of Science  Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research Grant-in-Aid for Young Scientists (B)

    Project Year :

    2017.04
    -
    2020.03
     

    Kubo Tai

     View Summary

    This project aimed to reveal the evolution of mammalian mastication by analyzing three-dimensional surface morphology of dental microwear left by food-tooth and tooth-tooth contacts, the method known as dental microwear texture analysis (DMTA). We first analyzed extant mammals with a known diet and found the depth of dental microwear correlate with percent of graminoids in their diet. We also applied DMTA to Triassic Cynodon, Exaeretodon argentinus, and found their scratches are aligned in an anteroposterior direction reflecting the direction of their jaw movement. Our project confirmed that dental microwear reflects diet and DMTA can be applied to fossils that are more than 200 million years old.

  • 系統樹から進化を探る―系統比較法の古生物への適用

    公益信託進化学振興木村資生基金  講演会・セミナー等開催費用助成

    Project Year :

    2019.04
    -
    2020.03
     

  • 博物館の研究を魅せる:研究者によるハンズオンとWeb展示解説を用いた研究の可視化

    全国科学博物館活動等助成事業

    Project Year :

    2017.04
    -
    2018.03
     

    久保 泰

  • How diet affected timings of the early radiation of different dinosaur taxa?

    Japan Society for the Promotion of Science  Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research Grant-in-Aid for Young Scientists (B)

    Project Year :

    2014.04
    -
    2016.03
     

    Kubo Tai

     View Summary

    This project aims to investigate the early radition of dinosaurs and effect of diet on it. We could not reconstruct diet of early dinosaurs as we have planned. On the otehr hand, from the body size distribution of nonplantigrade (digitigrade and unguligrade) dinosauromorphs and mammals, we pointed out that foot posture may have constrained their body size, caused absence of small sized species and directional evolutionary trend toward larger body size during their early radiation. We have suggested because dinosaurmorphs were the only nonplantigrade during the Mesozoic they could occupy mid to large body size in terrestrial tetrapod fauna at that time, like modern nonplantigrades.

  • 陸棲脊椎動物における走行適応の多様性と進化について-トカゲ類の形態比較研究

    日本学術振興会  科学研究費助成事業 奨励研究

    Project Year :

    2013.04
    -
    2014.03
     

    久保 泰

     View Summary

    申請者は三畳紀の主竜類(ワニと鳥類の共通の祖先およびその子孫を含む分類群)では、二足歩行が進む(前肢が相対的に短くなる)ほど、走行性が高くなる(中足骨が相対的に長くなる)ことを見出した(Kubo and Kubo 2012 : Paleobiology)。この傾向は哺乳類とは全く異なるが、申請者はむしろ四足歩行のままで走行適応ができるのは哺乳類独自の適応ではないかと考え、トカゲ類の走行適応が前肢の退縮を伴うのかを調べることで、四足での走行適応(哺乳類)と二足での走行適応(主竜類)のどちらが四肢動物でより一般的なのかを明らかにすることを目指した。
    まず、文献データから166種類のトカゲについて最高速度を調べた。これらのトカゲの肢骨の計測値を得るためにロンドンの大英自然史博物館の動物学収蔵庫で調査を行った。標本庫の中から、速度データのあるトカゲの乾燥骨格標本を探し出し、頭胴長、上腕骨、尺骨、橈骨、中手骨、指骨、大腿骨、脛骨、腓骨、中足骨、趾骨のうちで計測が可能なものの長さを測定した。収蔵庫のトカゲの骨格標本は全て確認し、19種、20個体の計測を行った。
    本研究では系統を考慮した解析で二足歩行(前肢の退縮)と走行適応が相関して進化しているのかを調べることを最終的な目的としているが、まず予察的な解析として、各トカゲ種の(上腕骨+尺骨)/(大腿骨+脛骨)の値の平均値を独立変数、文献から得られた各種の最高速度を目的変数に設定して、通常の回帰分析を行った。その結果回帰直線は(y=-7.4736x+8.6866)であり、傾き、切片ともに有意(P<0.001)であった。傾きがマイナスであることから、前肢が相対的に短いほど、最高速度が高いということが確かめられた。この結果は四肢動物では二足歩行(後肢のみへ投資する)ことによって走行適応をするのが一般的であることを示唆している。今後、系統関係を考慮した分析を行い、結果を論文原稿としてまとめたい。

  • 歯のマイクロウェアを用いた手取層産植物食恐竜の食性の解明

    日本科学協会  笹川科学研究助成金

    Project Year :

    2013.04
    -
    2014.03
     

    久保 泰

  • Posture change within basal archosaurs

    The Palaeontological Association  Sylvester-Bradley Awards

    Project Year :

    2004
    -
    2005
     

    久保 泰

▼display all

Misc

  • 歯のマイクロウェア解析で恐竜の食性を読み解く.

    久保泰, 久保麦野, ダニエラ・ウィンクラー

    岩波科学   2023 ( 11 )  2023.11

    Article, review, commentary, editorial, etc. (trade magazine, newspaper, online media)  

  • マイクロウェアとは? 歯に残された微小な傷から恐竜の食べ物を探る.

    久保 泰

    恐竜博2023公式図録     92 - 93  2023

    Article, review, commentary, editorial, etc. (trade magazine, newspaper, online media)  

  • 大型翼竜は飛べなかった?

    久保 泰

    現代科学     78  2022.07

    Article, review, commentary, editorial, etc. (trade magazine, newspaper, online media)  

  • 岐阜県大白川地域の下部白亜系手取層群より産出した脊椎動物化石(予報)

    高津翔平, 河部壮一郎, 久保貴志, 西谷徹, 久保泰, 宮田和周, 薗田哲平, 服部創紀, 酒井佑輔, 酒井佑輔, 松本正樹, 東洋一

    日本古生物学会例会講演予稿集   167th  2018

    J-GLOBAL

  • タイの下部白亜系コク・クルアト層産出の正鰐類化石

    久保泰, 柴田正輝, SONGTHAM Wickanet, JUNTASAKUL, Pratueng, 東洋一

    日本古生物学会年会講演予稿集   2016   30  2016.06

    J-GLOBAL

  • ズンガリプテルス、ケアラダクティルス

    久保 泰

    海のハンター展-恵み豊かな地球の未来-図録     30  2016

  • 首の骨が一番多い動物アルバートネクテス

    久保 泰

    メガ恐竜展2015-巨大化の謎にせまる―図録     25  2015

  • 長崎県上部白亜系三ツ瀬層のスッポン上科カメ類

    薗田哲平, 宮田和周, 久保泰, 柴田正輝, 東洋一

    日本古生物学会年会講演予稿集   2014   19  2014.06

    J-GLOBAL

  • 長崎県長崎市の上部白亜系三ツ瀬層から発見されたハドロサウルス上科鳥脚類の化石について

    柴田正輝, 宮田和周, 池上直樹, 久保泰, 東洋一

    日本古生物学会年会講演予稿集   2014   18  2014.06

    J-GLOBAL

  • 手取層群北谷層から発見されたオルニトミモサウルス類について

    東洋一, 柴田正輝, 久保泰, 関谷透

    日本古生物学会年会講演予稿集   2013   12  2013.06

    J-GLOBAL

  • 足跡からわかる翼竜の生態

    久保 泰

    地球46億年の旅   ( 24 ) 23  2013

  • 見て、感じて、学べば太古の世界へ

    久保 泰

    読売旅行   ( 770 ) 96 - 97  2013

  • 上部白亜系三ツ瀬層(長崎県長崎市)の脊椎動物化石とその層序学的意義

    宮田和周, 池上直樹, 東洋一, 柴田正輝, 久保泰, 舛谷達夫, 山本厚, 樋口一成, 高木美穂子

    日本古生物学会年会講演予稿集   2011   45  2011.06

    J-GLOBAL

  • 黄河大恐竜展展示解説書

    東洋一 監修, 董枝明, 呂君昌, 李大慶, 関谷透, 藤田将人, 野田芳和, 矢部 淳, 柴田正輝, 久保泰執筆

       2011

  • EVOLUTION OF LIMB POSTURE IN TERRESTRIAL TETRAPODS INFERRED FROM PERMIAN AND TRIASSIC TRACKWAYS

    Tai Kubo

    JOURNAL OF VERTEBRATE PALEONTOLOGY   29   130A - 130A  2009

    Research paper, summary (international conference)  

  • 恐竜は,立ち上がる.

    久保 泰

    超最新恐竜ワールド     44 - 47  2006

  • Posture change within basal archosaurs.

    Tai Kubo

    Palaeontological Association Newsletter   59   95 - 97  2005

  • 恐竜博2005カタログ

    真鍋真, 大橋智之, 久保泰, 執筆, 久保 泰 翻訳

    恐竜博2005カタログ  

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Syllabus

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Teaching Experience

  • 自然環境学実習

    東京大学大学院新領域創成科学研究科  

  • Vertebrate Paleontology

    早稲田大学国際教養学部  

  • 生涯学習概論

    東京都市大学自然科学科  

  • 地球科学特講

    福井大学教育地域科学部  

  • 地球生命史学

    福井県立大学一般教養  

  • 恐竜学

    福井県立大学一般教養  

  • Museology III

    Tokyo City University  

  • 博物館実習

    東京大学総合研究博物館  

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Sub-affiliation

  • Affiliated organization   Global Education Center