Cryodrakon

Cryodrakon ("cold dragon") is a genus of azhdarchid pterosaur that lived during the Late Cretaceous period in what is now Canada. It contains a single species, Cryodrakon boreas, recovered from the Dinosaur Park Formation.[1][2][3]

Cryodrakon
Temporal range: Campanian,
Life restoration
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Order: Pterosauria
Suborder: Pterodactyloidea
Family: Azhdarchidae
Subfamily: Quetzalcoatlinae
Genus: Cryodrakon
Hone et al., 2019[1]
Species:
C. boreas
Binomial name
Cryodrakon boreas
Hone et al., 2019[1]

Discovery and history

Location of the discovery of Cryodrakon (top; Canada)

Since 1972, bones of large azhdarchids have been reported from Alberta, representing the first pterosaur finds from Canada.[4] These were sometimes referred to a Quetzalcoatlus sp.[5] Later research by Michael Habib indicated that they represented a taxon new to science.[2]

In 2019, the type species Cryodrakon boreas was named and described by David William Elliott Hone, Michael Habib and François Therrien. The generic name is derived from the Greek κρύος, kryos, "icy cold", and δράκων, drakon, "dragon". The specific name means "belonging to Boreas, the north wind", or simply "northern".[1] Habib had considered the name Cryodrakon viserion, as a reference to the ice dragon in Game of Thrones.[2]

The holotype, TMP 1992.83, was found in a layer of the Dinosaur Park Formation dating from the late Campanian. The layer is between 76.7 and 74.3 million years old, with the excavation site being located near the lower or older boundary of this range. It consists of a partial skeleton lacking the skull. It contains a fourth neck vertebra, a rib, a humerus, a pteroid bone, a fourth metacarpal, a shinbone and a metatarsal.[2] In 1992, the skeleton was excavated in Quarry Q207 and in 1995 reported and partially described.[6] Its bones were not articulated but associated. It represents an immature individual. It is the only pterosaur skeleton, as opposed to single bones, ever found in Canada. It was described in more detail in 2005.[7]

All the known azhdarchid material from the Dinosaur Park Formation was referred to the species. The specimens consisted of the neck vertebrae TMP 1996.12.369, TMP 1981.16.107, TMP 1980.16.1367, TMP 1989.36.254 and TMP 1993.40.11; the scapulocoracoid TMP 1981.16.182; the ulna TMP 1965.14.398; fourth metacarpals TMP 1979.14.24, TMP 1987.36.16 and TMP 2005.12.156; wing finger phalanges TMP 1972.1.1, TMP 1982.19.295 and TMP 1992.36.936; and the thighbone TMP 1988.36.92. The bones represent individuals of various biological ages, among them juveniles and a large mature exemplar. Most bones are from medium-sized animals. In 2019, only the neck vertebrae were described in detail; bones from other parts of the body had already been treated in 2005.[2]

Description

The material indicates individuals of varying size. Specimen TMP 1996.12.369, a fifth neck vertebra with a length of only 10.6 millimeters (0.42 in), is from a juvenile animal with an estimated wingspan of about 2 meters (6.6 ft).[1] Most bones, among them the holotype, are similar in dimensions to those of Quetzalcoatlus lawsoni,[1] implying a wingspan of about 5 meters (16 ft).[2] Specimen TMP 1980.16.1367, originally mistaken as a leg bone in 1982, is a fifth neck vertebra with an estimated original length of 50 centimeters (1.6 ft), indicating an animal equal in size to the holotype of Quetzalcoatlus northropi,[1] the wingspan of which has been initially estimated at 13 meters (43 ft),[5] but then moderated at 10 meters (33 ft).[1][2][8]

Cryodrakon was proportionally similar to Quetzalcoatlus and other long-necked advanced azhdarchids, though its somewhat more robust bones may indicate that it was slightly heavier.[1]

Cryodrakon is distinguished from all other known azhdarchids by two features of its neck vertebrae. The lateral pneumatic fossae or pneumatophores, a pair of small openings leading to air pockets on either side of the neural canal, were positioned near the lower edge of the neural canal, while those of other azhdarchids (with the purported exception of Eurazhdarcho) were positioned higher up. The second distinguishing feature related to its postexapophyses, large bony knobs adjacent to the protruding rear connection surface of each vertebra, the cotyle. Cryodrakon's postexapophyses were prominent in width but short in length, clearly separated from the cotyle, and their facets were directed downwards.[1]

Classification

Cryodrakon was placed in the Azhdarchidae in 2019. No exact cladistic analysis was given clarifying the precise relationships with other azhdarchids. It would have been one of the oldest known azhdarchids of North-America.[1] Then in 2021, Brian Andres performed a phylogenetic analysis on Quetzalcoatlus, including Cryodrakon in the study. It was in a trichotomy with Wellnhopterus brevirostris and Quetzalcoatlus northropi, Q. lawsoni, Hatzegopteryx thambena, and Arambourgiania philadelphiae. Below are the results of the study.[9]

Azhdarchoidea

Tapejaridae

Neoazhdarchia

Dsungaripteromorpha

Neopterodactyloidea

Chaoyangopteridae

Azhdarchiformes

Radiodactylus

Montanazhdarcho

Azhdarchidae

Azhdarchinae

Quetzalcoatlinae

Phosphatodraco

Aralazhdarcho

Eurazhdarcho

Zhejiangopterus

Wellnhopterus

Cryodrakon

Hatzegopteryx

Arambourgiania

Quetzalcoatlus

Paleobiology

Cryodrakon is thought to have been capable of flight,[2] and if it was, it would have been one of the largest flying animals known to have existed.[3] Azhdarchid pterosaurs similar to Cryodrakon are currently thought to have fed by hunting for smaller animals while on the ground, similar to modern day marabou storks.[10]

Palaeoenvironment

Map showing global distribution of faunas containing small-medium and giant-sized azhdarchids, with Cryodrakon in the upper left

The Dinosaur Park Formation, where fossils of Cryodrakon have been excavated, preserves many fossils from alluvial and coastal plain environments. Both of these environments would have experienced high precipitation, warm temperatures, and high humidity, with conditions becoming more swamp-like as time progressed.[11] There was a great diversity of herbivorous dinosaurs including both lambeosaurine and saurolophine hadrosaurs, centrosaurine and chasmosaurine ceratopsians, and nodosaurid and ankylosaurid ankylosaurs, which could have been able to feed on different vegetation levels from one another.[7][12] The predatory niches were occupied by small maniraptoran theropods, medium-sized juvenile tyrannosaurids, and fully grown tyrannosaurids.[13]

A partial skeleton was found to have been scavenged by a dromaeosaurid, possibly Saurornitholestes langstoni. A broken tooth was found in one of the bones, which according to the authors, meant that the thin-walled bone "must have been very tough."[6]

See also

References

  1. Hone, D.; Habib, M.; Therrien, F. (September 2019). "Cryodrakon boreas, gen. et sp. nov., a Late Cretaceous Canadian azhdarchid pterosaur". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 39 (3): e1649681. doi:10.1080/02724634.2019.1649681. S2CID 203406859.
  2. Greshk, Michael (10 September 2019). "New 'frozen dragon' pterosaur found hiding in plain sight - The flying reptile was mostly head and neck—and had at least a 16-foot wingspan, if not bigger". National Geographic Society. Retrieved 10 September 2019.
  3. Malewar, Amit (10 September 2019). "New reptile species was one of largest ever flying animals - It is different from other azhdarchids and so it gets a name". TechExplorist.com. Retrieved 10 September 2019.
  4. Russell, Dale A. (1972). "A Pterosaur from the Oldman Formation (Cretaceous) of Alberta". Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences. 9 (10): 1338–1340. doi:10.1139/e72-119.
  5. Currie, Philip J.; Russell, Dale A. (1982). "A giant pterosaur (Reptilia: Archosauria) from the Judith River (Oldman) Formation of Alberta". Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences. 19 (4): 894–897. doi:10.1139/e82-074.
  6. Currie, Philip J.; Jacobsen, Aase Roland (1995). "An azhdarchid pterosaur eaten by a velociraptorine theropod". Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences. 32 (7): 922–925. doi:10.1139/e95-077.
  7. Currie, P.J., and E.B. Koppelhus (eds.). 2005. Dinosaur Provincial Park: A Spectacular Ancient Ecosystem Revealed. Indiana University Press, Bloomington, Indiana, 672 pp
  8. Paul, Gregory S. (2022). The Princeton Field Guide to Pterosaurs. Princeton University Press. p. 159. doi:10.1515/9780691232218. ISBN 9780691232218. S2CID 249332375.
  9. Andres, Brian (14 December 2021). "Phylogenetic systematics of Quetzalcoatlus Lawson 1975 (Pterodactyloidea: Azhdarchoidea)". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 41 (sup1): 203–217. doi:10.1080/02724634.2020.1801703. ISSN 0272-4634.
  10. Witton, Mark P.; Naish, Darren (28 May 2008). "A Reappraisal of Azhdarchid Pterosaur Functional Morphology and Paleoecology". PLOS ONE. 3 (5): e2271. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0002271. PMC 2386974. PMID 18509539.
  11. Matson, Christopher Cody (2010). Paleoenvironments of the Upper Cretaceous Dinosaur Park Formation in southern Alberta, Canada (Unpublished master's thesis). University of Calgary. p. 125. doi:10.11575/PRISM/18677.
  12. Mallon, Jordan C.; Evans, David C.; Ryan, Michael J.; Anderson, Jason S. (4 April 2013). "Feeding height stratification among the herbivorous dinosaurs from the Dinosaur Park Formation (upper Campanian) of Alberta, Canada". BMC Ecology. 13 (1): 14. doi:10.1186/1472-6785-13-14. PMC 3637170. PMID 23557203.
  13. Holtz, Thomas R. (1 September 2021). "Theropod guild structure and the tyrannosaurid niche assimilation hypothesis: implications for predatory dinosaur macroecology and ontogeny in later Late Cretaceous Asiamerica". Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences. 58 (9): 778–795. doi:10.1139/cjes-2020-0174.
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