4.6 Article

A new specimen of Sinopterus dongi (Pterosauria, Tapejaridae) from the Jiufotang Formation (Early Cretaceous, China)

Journal

PEERJ
Volume 9, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PEERJ INC
DOI: 10.7717/peerj.123602/26

Keywords

Pterosauria; Osteology; Systematics; Jiufotang Formation; Jehol Biotas; Tapejaridae; Taxonomy

Funding

  1. Nature Science Foundation of Liaoning [2019-MS-105]
  2. FAPESP [2019/10231-6]
  3. Slovak Research and Development Agency [APVV-18-0251]
  4. Scientific Research Foundation of Hainan Tropical Ocean University [RHDRC202008]
  5. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41688103, 41790452]
  6. China Geological Survey [DD20190397]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The article explores the taxonomy of tapejarine specimens, focusing on a new postcranial specimen of Sinopterus dongi from the Jiufotang Formation in China. While abundant specimens exist, detailed revisions on the taxonomic issues are still lacking, highlighting the need for further comparative studies and taxonomic revisions.
The Tapejarinae are edentulous pterosaurs that are relatively common in Cretaceous continental deposits in South America, North Africa, Europe, and China (mostly Early Cretaceous). The Chinese Jiufotang Formation is particularly rich in tapejarine specimens, having yielded over 10 described specimens and dozens of undescribed ones. For the Jiufotang Formation, a total of seven nominal tapejarid species and two genera have been proposed. Some debate exists over how many of those are valid or, alternatively, sexual or ontogenetic morphs of fewer (or even a single) species. Despite the abundance of specimens and the relevant taxonomic problems involved, detailed revisions of the matter are still lacking. This is partly due to the relatively scarce knowledge on the comparative osteology of the Sinopterus complex, which is hampered by the fact that most specimens have been only preliminarily described. In this contribution, we present a new postcranial specimen, D3072, which we attribute to the type-species of the genus, Sinopterus dongi. This new specimen helps shed some new light in the osteology of Sinopterus dongi, hopefully serving as a basis for future comparative studies involving further specimens and other proposed species and, subsequently, taxonomic revisions.

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