Head musculature and mechanics In 1995, Lingham-Soliar studied the head musculature of
M. hoffmannii. Because soft tissue like muscles do not easily fossilize, reconstruction of the musculature was largely based on the structure of the skull, muscle scarring on the skull, and the musculature in extant monitor lizards. Rather,
M. hoffmannii likely employed inertial feeding (in which the animal thrusts its head and neck backward to release a held prey item and immediately thrust the head and neck forward to close the jaws around the item) and used jaw adduction to assist in biting during prey seizure. The
magnus adductor muscles, which attach to the lower jaws to the cranium and have a major role in biting function, are massive, indicating
M. hoffmannii was capable of enormous bite forces. The long, narrow, and heavy nature of the lower jaws and attachment of tendons at the coronoid process would have allowed quick opening and closing of the mouth with little energy input underwater, which also contributed to the powerful bite force of
M. hoffmannii and suggests it would not have needed the strong
magnus depressor muscles (jaw-opening muscles) seen in some plesiosaurs. Its elongated paddle-like limbs functioned as
hydrofoils for maneuvering the animal. The paddles' steering function was enabled by large muscle attachments from the outwards-facing side of the humerus to the radius and ulna and modified joints allowed an enhanced ability of
rotating the flippers. The powerful forces resulting from use of the paddles may have sometimes resulted in bone damage, as evidenced by a
M. hoffmannii ilium with significant separation of the bone's
head from the rest of the bone likely caused by frequent shearing forces at the articulation joint.
Mosasaurus was likely
endothermic and maintained a constant body temperature independent of the external environment. Although there is no direct evidence specific to the genus, studies on the biochemistry of related mosasaur genera such as
Clidastes suggests that endothermy was likely present in all mosasaurs. Such a trait is unique among squamates, the only known exception being the
Argentine black and white tegu, which can maintain partial endothermy. This adaptation would have given several advantages to
Mosasaurus, including increased stamina when foraging across larger areas and pursuing prey. It may have also been a factor that allowed
Mosasaurus to thrive in the colder climates of locations such as
Antarctica.
Sensory functions of
Mosasaurus Mosasaurus had relatively large
eye sockets but alternatively allowed excellent processing of a two-dimensional environment, such as the near-surface waters inhabited by
Mosasaurus. Chemical and structural data in the fossils of
M. lemonnieri and
M. conodon suggests they may have also hunted in deeper waters. Carbon isotope studies on fossils of multiple
M. hoffmannii individuals have found extremely low values of
δ13C, the lowest in all mosasaurs for the largest individuals. Mosasaurs with lower δ13C values tended to occupy higher trophic levels, and one factor for this was dietary: a diet of prey rich in lipids such as sea turtles and other large marine reptiles can lower δ13C values.
M. hoffmannii's low δ13C levels reinforces its likely position as an apex predator. which also appears to be the case with
M. missouriensis. Currently, there are only two known examples of a
Mosasaurus preserved with stomach contents. The first is a well-preserved partial skeleton of a small
M. missouriensis dated about 75 million years old with dismembered and punctured remains of a long fish in its gut. This fish was much longer than the length of the mosasaur's skull, which measured in length, confirming that
M. missouriensis consumed prey larger than its head by dismembering and consuming bits at a time. Due to coexistence with other large mosasaurs like
Prognathodon, which specialized in robust prey,
M. missouriensis likely specialized more on prey best consumed using cutting-adapted teeth in an example of
niche partitioning.
Mosasaurus may have taught their offspring how to hunt, as supported by a fossil
nautiloid Argonautilus catarinae with bite marks from two conspecific mosasaurs, one being from a juvenile and the other being from an adult. Analysis of the tooth marks by a 2004 study by Kauffman concluded that the mosasaurs were either
Mosasaurus or
Platecarpus. The positioning of both bite marks are at the direction the nautiloid's head would have been facing, indicating it was incapable of escaping and was thus already sick or dead during the attacks; it is possible this phenomenon was from a parent mosasaur teaching its offspring about cephalopods as an alternate source of prey and how to hunt one. An alternate explanation postulates the bite marks as from one individual mosasaur that lightly bit the nautiloid at first, then proceeded to bite again with greater force. However, there are differences in tooth spacing between both bites which indicate different jaw sizes.
Behavior and paleopathology Intraspecific combat There is fossil evidence that
Mosasaurus engaged in aggressive and lethal combat with others of its kind. One partial skeleton of
M. conodon bears multiple cuts, breaks, and punctures on various bones, particularly in the rear portions of the skull and neck, and a tooth from another
M. conodon piercing through the quadrate bone. No injuries on the fossil show signs of healing, suggesting that the mosasaur was killed by its attacker by a fatal blow in the skull. Likewise, an
M. missouriensis skeleton has a tooth from another
M. missouriensis embedded in the lower jaw underneath the eye. In this case, there were signs of healing around the wound, implying survival of the incident. Takuya Konishi suggested an alternative cause of this example being head-biting behavior during
courtship as seen in modern lizards. Attacks by another
Mosasaurus are a possible cause of physical
pathologies in other skulls, but they could have instead arisen from other incidents like attempted biting on hard turtle shells. In 2004, Lingham-Soliar observed that if these injuries were indeed the result of an intraspecific attack, then there is a pattern of them concentrating in the skull region. Modern crocodiles commonly attack each other by grappling an opponent's head using their jaws, and Lingham-Soliar hypothesized that
Mosasaurus employed similar head-grappling behavior during intraspecific combat. Many of the fossils with injuries possibly attributable to intraspecific combat are of juvenile or sub-adult
Mosasaurus, leading to the possibility that attacks on smaller, weaker individuals may have been more common. However, the attacking mosasaurs of the
M. conodon and
M. missouriensis specimens were likely similar in size to the victims.
Diseases There are some
M. hoffmannii jaws with evidence of infectious diseases as a result of physical injuries. Two examples include IRSNB R25 and IRSNB R27, both having fractures and other pathologies in their dentaries. IRSNB R25 preserves a
complete fracture near the sixth
tooth socket. Extensive amounts of bony
callus almost overgrowing the tooth socket are present around the fracture along with various
osteolytic cavities,
abscess canals, damages to the
trigeminal nerve, and inflamed erosions signifying severe bacterial infection. There are two finely ulcerated scratches on the bone callus, which may have developed as part of the healing process. IRSNB R27 has two fractures: one had almost fully healed and the other is an open fracture with nearby teeth broken off as a result. The fracture is covered with a
nonunion formation of
bony callus with shallow scratch marks and a large pit connected to an abscess canal. Lingham-Soliar described this pit as resembling a tooth mark from a possible attacking mosasaur. Both specimens show signs of deep bacterial infection alongside the fractures; some bacteria may have spread to nearby damaged teeth and caused
tooth decay, which may have entered deeper tissue from prior post-traumatic or secondary infections. The dentaries ahead of the fractures in both specimens are in good condition, suggesting that the arteries and trigeminal nerves had not been damaged; if they were, those areas would have
necrotized due to lack of blood. The dentaries' condition suggests that the species may have had an efficient process of immobilizing the fracture during healing, which helped prevent damage to vital blood vessels and nerves. This, along with signs of healing, indicates that the fractures were not imminently fatal. In examinations of
M. conodon fossils from Alabama and New Jersey and
M. lemonnieri fossils from Belgium, Rothschild and Martin in 2005 observed that the condition affected between 3-17% of the vertebrae in the mosasaurs' spines.
Life history , Netherlands It is likely that
Mosasaurus was
viviparous (giving live birth) like most modern mammals today. There is no evidence for live birth in
Mosasaurus itself, but it is known in a number of other mosasaurs; examples include a skeleton of a pregnant
Carsosaurus, and fossils of newborn
Clidastes from
pelagic (open ocean) deposits. ==Paleoecology==