Portsmouth researchers discover fossils

Portsmouth palaebiologist and researchers from the United States and Morocco have identified three new species of toothed pterosaurs

25 March 2020

3 min read

A community of flying reptiles that inhabited the Sahara 100 million years ago has been discovered by a University of Portsmouth palaebiologist and an international team of scientists. 

Professor David Martill from Portsmouth and researchers from the United States and Morocco identified the three new species of toothed pterosaurs. 

The pterosaurs were part of an ancient river ecosystem in Africa that was full of life, including fish, crocodiles, turtles and several predatory dinosaurs.

The research was led by Megan Jacobs from Baylor University, Texas, who worked alongside Nizar Ibrahim from the University of Detroit Mercy and Professor Martill from Portsmouth.

The new fossils, published in the journal Cretaceous Research, are helping to uncover the very poorly known evolutionary history of Africa during the time of the dinosaurs. The new finds show that African pterosaurs were quite similar to those found on other continents. 

 

We are in a golden age for discovering pterodactyles. This year alone we have discovered three new species and we are only into March.

Professor David Martill, Professor of Palaeobiology

researchers at portsmouth discover three new species of flying reptile

These flying predators soared above a world dominated by predators, including crocodile-like hunters and carnivorous dinosaurs. Interestingly, herbivores such as sauropods and ornithischian dinosaurs are rare. Many of the predators, including the toothed pterosaurs, preyed on a superabundance of fish.

Professor Martill,  from the School of the Environment, Geography and Geosciences, said: “We are in a golden age for discovering pterodactyles. This year alone we have discovered three new species and we are only into March.”

The new pterosaurs identified by the researchers from chunks of jaws and teeth, found in the middle Cretaceous Kem Kem beds of Morocco, had wingspans of around three to four metres. These aerial fishers snatched up their prey while on the wing, using a murderous looking set of large spike-like teeth that formed a highly effective tooth grab. Large pterosaurs such as these would have been able to forage over vast distances, similar to present day birds such as condors and albatrosses.

“These new finds provide an important window into the world of African pterosaurs,” said Ibrahim, assistant professor of Biology at Detroit Mercy. “We know so much more about pterosaurs from places like Europe and Asia, so describing new specimens from Africa is always very exciting.”

One of the species, Anhanguera, was previously only known from Brazil.

Another, Ornithocheirus, had until now only been found in England and Middle Asia.