Earliest filter-feeding pterosaur from the Jurassic of China and ecological evolution of Pterodactyloidea
Author(s) -
ChangFu Zhou,
KeQin Gao,
Hongyu Yi,
Jinzhuang Xue,
Quanguo Li,
Richard C. Fox
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
royal society open science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.84
H-Index - 51
ISSN - 2054-5703
DOI - 10.1098/rsos.160672
Subject(s) - cretaceous , paleontology , mesozoic , biology , vertebrate , range (aeronautics) , divergence (linguistics) , ecology , structural basin , biochemistry , linguistics , materials science , philosophy , composite material , gene
Pterosaurs were a unique clade of flying reptiles that were contemporaries of dinosaurs in Mesozoic ecosystems. The Pterodactyloidea as the most species-diverse group of pterosaurs dominated the sky during Cretaceous time, but earlier phases of their evolution remain poorly known. Here, we describe a 160 Ma filter-feeding pterosaur from western Liaoning, China, representing the geologically oldest record of the Ctenochasmatidae, a group of exclusive filter feeders characterized by an elongated snout and numerous fine teeth. The new pterosaur took the lead of a major ecological transition in pterosaur evolution from fish-catching to filter-feeding adaptation, prior to the Tithonian (145–152 Ma) diversification of the Ctenochasmatidae. Our research shows that the rise of ctenochasmatid pterosaurs was followed by the burst of eco-morphological divergence of other pterodactyloid clades, which involved a wide range of feeding adaptations that considerably altered the terrestrial ecosystems of the Cretaceous world.
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