Intraspecific Variation in the Pterosaur Implications for Flight and Socio-sexual Signaling
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Environmental Health
General Medicine
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Pterosaurs were the first powered flying vertebrates, with a fossil record that stretches back to about 230 million years before present. Most species are only known from one to three specimens, which are most often fragmentary. However, is known from numerous excellent specimens, including multiple specimens with soft tissue preservation. As such, is one of the only pterosaurs amenable to analysis for intraspecific variation. It has been previously predicted that elements directly involved in the flight apparatus, such as those of the forelimb, will be more highly constrained in their proportions than other parts of the skeleton. We investigated the degree of variation seen in elements and body parts of , which represents the best model system among pterosaurs for testing these expectations of intraspecific variation. We recover evidence for high levels of constraint throughout the appendicular and axial elements (head, neck, torso, tail, forelimbs, hindlimbs), suggesting that all were important for flight. We further find that tail variation increases among the largest specimens, suggesting reduced constraint and/or stronger sexual selection on the tail in more mature individuals.
A giant specimen of and comments on the ontogeny of rhamphorhynchines.
Hone D, McDavid S PeerJ. 2025; 13:e18587.
PMID: 39763697 PMC: 11700493. DOI: 10.7717/peerj.18587.