A tiny ornithodiran archosaur from the Triassic of Madagascar and the role of miniaturization in dinosaur and pterosaur ancestry

Early members of the dinosaur–pterosaur clade Ornithodira are very rare in the fossil record, obscuring our understanding of the origins of this important group. Here, we describe an early ornithodiran (Kongonaphon kely gen. et sp. nov.) from the Mid-to-Upper Triassic of Madagascar that represents o...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2020-07, Vol.117 (30), p.17932-17936
Hauptverfasser: Kammerer, Christian F., Nesbitt, Sterling J., Flynn, John J., Ranivoharimanana, Lovasoa, Wyss, André R.
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container_issue 30
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container_title Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS
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creator Kammerer, Christian F.
Nesbitt, Sterling J.
Flynn, John J.
Ranivoharimanana, Lovasoa
Wyss, André R.
description Early members of the dinosaur–pterosaur clade Ornithodira are very rare in the fossil record, obscuring our understanding of the origins of this important group. Here, we describe an early ornithodiran (Kongonaphon kely gen. et sp. nov.) from the Mid-to-Upper Triassic of Madagascar that represents one of the smallest nonavian ornithodirans. Although dinosaurs and gigantism are practically synonymous, an analysis of body size evolution in dinosaurs and other archosaurs in the context of this taxon and related forms demonstrates that the earliest-diverging members of the group may have been smaller than previously thought, and that a profound miniaturization event occurred near the base of the avian stem lineage. In phylogenetic analysis, Kongonaphon is recovered as a member of the Triassic ornithodiran clade Lagerpetidae, expanding the range of this group into Africa and providing data on the craniodental morphology of lagerpetids. The conical teeth of Kongonaphon exhibit pitted microwear consistent with a diet of hard-shelled insects, indicating a shift in trophic ecology to insectivory associated with diminutive body size. Small ancestral body size suggests that the extreme rarity of early ornithodirans in the fossil record owes more to taphonomic artifact than true reflection of the group’s evolutionary history.
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subjects Animals
Biological Evolution
Biological Sciences
Body size
Dinosaurs
Dinosaurs - anatomy & histology
Dinosaurs - classification
Fossils
Gigantism
Insect ecology
Insects
Madagascar
Miniaturization
Morphology
New species
Paleontology
Phylogeny
Taphonomy
Triassic
title A tiny ornithodiran archosaur from the Triassic of Madagascar and the role of miniaturization in dinosaur and pterosaur ancestry
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