In 2013, a police raid at Santos Harbor in Brazil recovered about 30,000 smuggled fossils, including the most intact specimen of a type of big-headed pterosaur ever found. A new analysis of the fossil provides insight into the flying reptileтАЩs foraging style, flight capability and anatomy, researchers report August 25 in PLOS ONE.
Identified as Tupandactylus navigans, the fossil is a member of a group of pterosaurs called tapejarids. These pterosaurs are known for their oversize, crested skulls, and hail from the early Cretaceous Period, which lasted from about 145 million to 100 million years ago.
Some well-preserved tapejarid fossils have been found in China, but they arenтАЩt as complete as the newly analyzed fossil, and the pterosaurтАЩs anatomy hadnтАЩt been fully described. тАЬThis is the first time we have the full skull and the full [body],тАЭ says Victor Beccari, a paleontologist at the NOVA School of Science & Technology in Caparica, Portugal.
When BeccariтАЩs team received the fossil in 2016, it had already been cut into six blocks. тАЬItтАЩs a shame,тАЭ Beccari says, тАЬbut we used it to our advantage.тАЭ The researchers fit the sliced pieces inside a CT scanner, and then used the scans to produce a 3-D model of the pterosaurтАЩs skeleton that revealed parts still buried inside rock.
Previous studies suggested that tapejarids had a short, stout neck to support their large head during flight. But BeccariтАЩs team showed that the neck accounted for over half of the spineтАЩs length, which could have made sustained flight difficult. The fossilтАЩs long hind legs and relatively short arms hint that tapejarids could have been comfortable walking.
These observations suggest that T. navigans may have behaved similarly to peacocks, Beccari says. The tapejaridтАЩs crest probably attracted mates, and the pterosaur may have flown to treetops to look for food or escape from predators, he says. тАЬBut it spent most of its time walking on the ground.тАЭ