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A skeleton from the Middle Jurassic of Scotland illuminates an earlier origin of large pterosaurs

  • Natalia Jagielska
  • , Michael O'Sullivan
  • , Gregory F. Funston
  • , Ian B. Butler
  • , Thomas J. Challands
  • , Neil D.L. Clark
  • , Nicholas C. Fraser
  • , Amelia Penny
  • , Dugald A. Ross
  • , Mark Wilkinson
  • , Stephen L. Brusatte
  • University of Edinburgh
  • Co. Limerick
  • University of Glasgow
  • National Museums of Scotland
  • University of St Andrews
  • Staffin Museum

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

21 Scopus citations

Abstract

Pterosaurs were the first vertebrates to evolve flight1,2 and include the largest flying animals in Earth history.3,4 While some of the last-surviving species were the size of airplanes, pterosaurs were long thought to be restricted to small body sizes (wingspans ca. <1.8–1.6 m) from their Triassic origins through the Jurassic, before increasing in size when derived long-skulled and short-tailed pterodactyloids lived alongside a diversity of birds in the Cretaceous.5 We report a new spectacularly preserved three-dimensional skeleton from the Middle Jurassic of Scotland, which we assign to a new genus and species: Dearc sgiathanach gen. et sp. nov. Its wingspan is estimated at >2.5 m, and bone histology shows it was a juvenile-subadult still actively growing when it died, making it the largest known Jurassic pterosaur represented by a well-preserved skeleton. A review of fragmentary specimens from the Middle Jurassic of England demonstrates that a diversity of pterosaurs was capable of reaching larger sizes at this time but have hitherto been concealed by a poor fossil record. Phylogenetic analysis places D. sgiathanach in a clade of basal long-tailed non-monofenestratan pterosaurs, in a subclade of larger-bodied species (Angustinaripterini) with elongate skulls convergent in some aspects with pterodactyloids.6 Far from a static prologue to the Cretaceous, the Middle Jurassic was a key interval in pterosaur evolution, in which some non-pterodactyloids diversified and experimented with larger sizes, concurrent with or perhaps earlier than the origin of birds.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1446-1453.e4
JournalCurrent Biology
Volume32
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 28 2022

Keywords

  • evolution
  • fossil
  • histology
  • Isle of Skye
  • Jurassic
  • paleontology
  • phylogeny
  • pterosaur
  • Scotland
  • wingspan

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