New evidence from China for the nature of the pterosaur evolutionary transition

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Abstract

Pterosaurs are extinct flying reptiles, the first vertebrates to achieve powered flight. Our understanding of the evolutionary transition between basal, predominantly long-tailed forms to derived short-tailed pterodactyloids remained poor until the discovery of Wukongopterus and Darwinopterus in western Liaoning, China. In this paper we report on a new genus and species, Douzhanopterus zhengi, that has a reduced tail, 173% the length of the humerus, and a reduced fifth pedal digit, whose first phalange is ca. 20% the length of metatarsal III, both unique characters to Monofenestra. The morphological comparisons and phylogenetic analysis presented in this paper demonstrate that Douzhanopterus is the sister group to the € Painten pro-pterodactyloid' and the Pterodactyloidea, reducing the evolutionary gap between long- and short-tailed pterosaurs.

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Wang, X., Jiang, S., Zhang, J., Cheng, X., Yu, X., Li, Y., … Wang, X. (2017). New evidence from China for the nature of the pterosaur evolutionary transition. Scientific Reports, 7. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep42763

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