Alexandra E Fernandes, Diego Pol, Oliver W M Rauhut
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
As the first group of tetrapods to achieve powered flight, pterosaurs first appeared in the Late Triassic. They proliferated globally, and by the Late Jurassic through the Cretaceous, the majority of these taxa belonged to the clade Monofenestrata (which includes the well-known Pterodactyloidea as its major subclade), typified by their single undivided fenestra anterior to the orbit. Here, a new taxon Melkamter pateko gen. et sp. nov., represented by the specimen MPEF-PV 11530 (comprising a partial cranium and associated postcranial elements), is reported from the latest Early Jurassic (Toarcian) locality of Queso Rallado (Cañadón Asfalto Formation) and referred to the clade Monofenestrata, increasing our previously known taxonomic and geographic representations, and temporal range for this clade. This occurrence marks the oldest record of Monofenestrata globally and helps to shed critical light on the evolutionary processes undergone during the 'non-pterodactyloid'-to-pterodactyloid transition within the Pterosauria. In addition, another single isolated tooth from the same locality shows ctenochasmatid affinities. These finds further elucidate the still-poor Gondwanan Jurassic pterosaur fossil record, underscoring that most of our current ideas about the timing and modes of pterosaur evolution during that period are largely based on (and biased by) the pterosaur fossil record of the Northern Hemisphere.
作为最早实现动力飞行的四足动物,翼龙最早出现在晚三叠世。它们在全球范围内繁殖,从晚侏罗世到白垩纪,这些分类群中的大多数属于单翅门进化支(其中包括著名的翼手纲作为其主要亚进化支),其典型特征是它们在轨道前有一个未分割的窗。本文报道了在Queso Rallado (Cañadón Asfalto组)早侏罗世(Toarcian)最新地区发现的以标本MPEF-PV 11530为代表的新分类单元Melkamter pateko gen. et sp. nov.(包括部分头盖骨和相关的后头盖骨),并将其归入单孔门,增加了我们之前已知的该分支的分类和地理代表性,以及时间范围。这一发现标志着全球最古老的单翅手亚目记录,并有助于揭示在翼龙内部从“非翼手亚目”到翼手亚目过渡的进化过程。此外,来自同一地区的另一颗分离牙齿显示出栉蛛的亲缘关系。这些发现进一步阐明了仍然贫乏的冈瓦纳侏罗纪翼龙化石记录,强调了我们目前关于那个时期翼龙进化的时间和模式的大多数观点在很大程度上是基于(并受到)北半球翼龙化石记录的影响。
期刊介绍:
Royal Society Open Science is a new open journal publishing high-quality original research across the entire range of science on the basis of objective peer-review.
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