Monday 16 March 2015

The origin of the pterosaurs

The first tetrapods to evolve powered flight were the pterosaurs. These were a group of archosaurs related to the dinosaurs, but not dinosaurs themselves. The earliest known pterosaur was Eudimorphodon, who lived in what is now Italy around 230-220 million years ago, in the late Triassic. However, while the earliest known pterosaur, Eudimorphodon had specialised multi-cusped teeth not found in any of the later pterosaurs, so it would not have been ancestral to them but rather part of a distinct pterosaur lineage that died out in the Triassic. Furthermore, both Eudimorphodon and other late Triassic pterosaurs are "completely" developed, having all the typical pterosaur skeletal characteristics. This suggests the origins of pterosaurs may lie even further back in the past, in the earlier Triassic or perhaps even in the Permian (Wellnhofer, 1991).

Figure 1: Triassic pterosaurs Eudimorphodon (right) and Peteinosaurus (left). In the background a Ticinosuchus wanders about. Artist: John Sibbick.

No fossils of the pterosaurs' immediate ancestors are known. The most likely theory on their origins is that they evolved from arboreal creatures that would leap from branch to branch, flapping their forelimbs to stay airborne longer. Pterosaur hips had great freedom of movement, their knees and ankles were hinge-like and their feet were plantigrade. The knees and ankles did not permit the necessary rotation for them to move bipedally, so pterosaurs were obligate quadrupeds (though they may have had bipedal ancestors). A possible explanation for these features is that the early pterosaurs or proto-pterosaurs were arboreal creatures that evolved powerful leaping from branch to branch as an active mode of transport not dissimilar to that of arboreal leaping primates (Christopher, 1997). These arboreal leapers would not have been gliders, who merely fall slowly downwards and forwards with the help of special flaps, but rather creatures utilising a quite different form of locomotion, one that led them to eventually having their forelimbs evolve into more and more sophisticated flapping airfoils.

Figure 2: A hypothetical series of pterosaur ancestors. Artist: Maija Karala.
The next blog post shall delve into more detail on the anatomical and physiological features that made the pterosaurs such great fliers.

References
Christopher, B. S. (1997). The arboreal leaping theory of the origin of pterosaur flight. Historical Biology. 12 (3).
Wellnhofer, P. (1991). The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Pterosaurs. Crescent Books: New York.

Image sources
Figure 1: http://www.moensklint.dk/media/37420/eudimorphodon_large.jpg
Figure 2: https://gwawinapterus.files.wordpress.com/2014/02/tumblr_mrseawh0qk1sx3tcvo1_1280.jpg

5 comments:

  1. Fascinating. You mention that they evolved powerful leaping, in a manner similar to those of arboreal leaping primates. I have to wonder then why primates didn’t evolve powered flight?  It would have made things interesting for our own evolution! In the figure of the pterosaurs in flight, I was interested in the structure of the tail Would this have aided flight in any way? This is a very cool blog to follow!

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    Replies
    1. As for why no arboreal primate ever evolved powered flight I guess it would be that while arboreal leaping lifestyle could potentially lead to flight it does not guarantee it.
      That said, I will not completely rule out the possibility of some primate maybe evolving flight in the distant future.

      On pterosaur tails, originally they would have assisted with balance. They could not have been too important though as only the early pterosaurs had actual tails, while the later ones only had, at most, a little tail stub.

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  2. You wrote: "No fossils of the pterosaurs' immediate ancestors are known." This is nonsense. We have the proximal and more distant ancestors of pterosaurs all the way back to the first tetrapods.

    Start here:
    http://www.reptileevolution.com/cosesaurus.htm
    http://www.reptileevolution.com/pterosaur-wings.htm

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