Dong Zhiming named this genus for IVPP V4732, a partial lower jaw from a juvenile hadrosaur. This partial bone, with 18 columns of stacked teeth in a typical hadrosaur tooth battery, measures 37 centimeters long (15 inches).[1] Dong later estimated the length of the individual at 2.6 meters (8.5 feet).[2]
History
Dong regarded this genus as much like Edmontosaurus, albeit in tiny form.[1] However, Michael K. Brett-Surman, a hadrosaur specialist, regarded the material as showing no characteristics that would allow it to be differentiated from other duckbills.[3] The most recent review accepts Brett-Surman's position, and regards Microhadrosaurus as a dubious name.[4]
Paleobiology
As a hadrosaurid, Microhadrosaurus would have been a bipedal/quadrupedalherbivore, eating plants with a sophisticated skull that permitted a grinding motion analogous to chewing, and was furnished with hundreds of continually-replaced teeth.[4] Because it is only known from a partial jaw from a juvenile, little more than general information can be drawn from it at this point.
^ abDong Zhiming (1979). "The Cretaceous dinosaur fossils in southern China". Mesozoic and Cenozoic Red Beds of South China (in Chinese). Nanxiong, China: Science Press. pp. 342–350.
^Brett-Surman, Michael K. (1989). A revision of the Hadrosauridae (Reptilia:Ornithischia) and their evolution during the Campanian and Maastrichtian. Ph.D. dissertation. Washington, D.C.: Graduate School of Arts and Sciences of The George Washington University. pp. 1–272.
^ abHorner, John R.; Weishampel, David B.; Forster, Catherine A (2004). "Hadrosauridae". In Weishampel, David B.; Dodson, Peter; Osmólska, Halszka (eds.). The Dinosauria (2nd ed.). Berkeley: University of California Press. pp. 438–463. ISBN0-520-24209-2.