Wondrous extinct flying reptiles boasted
rudimentary feathers
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[December 18, 2018]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A microscopic
examination of fossils from China has revealed that the fur-like body
covering of pterosaurs, the remarkable flying reptiles that lived
alongside dinosaurs, was actually made up of rudimentary feathers.
The surprising discovery described by scientists on Monday means that
dinosaurs and their bird descendants were not the only creatures to
boast feathers and that feathers likely appeared much longer ago than
previously known. Pterosaurs were only distantly related to dinosaurs
and birds.
Birds need feathers to fly. That was not the case with pterosaurs.
Short, hair-like feathers covered their bodies and wings but lacked the
strong central shaft of avian flight feathers, the researchers said.
They may have provided insulation and other benefits, as hair does for
mammals.
"They were not flight feathers," said paleontologist Baoyu Jiang of
Nanjing University, who led the research published in the journal Nature
Ecology & Evolution. "They looked fuzzy, and they didn't have
complicated feathers."
The researchers examined beautifully preserved Jurassic Period fossils
roughly 160 to 165 million years old of two small pterosaurs called
anurognathids from northeastern China. Apparently forest dwellers and
insect eaters, they possessed 18-inch (45 cm) wingspans, short tails and
superficially frog-like faces.
Pterosaurs were the first vertebrates to master flight, followed much
later by birds and bats. Scientists have known since the 19th century
that pterosaurs had a fur-like body covering and there has been a
long-running scientific debate about how to classify it.
Many of the filaments, under the microscope, showed branching like in
feathers but not hair.
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A Daohugou pterosaur, with four different feather types over its
head, neck, body, and wings, and a generally ginger-brown color,
based on Jurassic Period fossils unearthed in China, is seen in this
illustration handout, released from University of Bristol, in
Bristol, United Kingdom on December 14, 2018. Courtesy Yuan
Zhang/Handout via REUTERS
University of Bristol paleontologist and study co-author Mike Benton
said four types of pterosaur feathers were observed: downy feathers;
single filaments; bundles of filaments; and filaments with tufts at
the end. Tiny pigment-related structures indicated these feathers
were ginger-brown in color.
Birds, many meat-eating dinosaurs and some plant-eating dinosaurs
are known to have had feathers, though these looked different from
those seen on the pterosaurs.
"We feel the simplest thing for the present is to call them all
feathers because they show branching, the fundamental distinguishing
character of a feather," Benton said.
Pterosaurs and dinosaurs both appeared roughly 230 million years ago
during the Triassic Period. The researchers said the appearance of
feathers in both groups suggests feathers first evolved perhaps 250
million years ago in a common ancestor of pterosaurs and dinosaurs.
Pterosaurs, the biggest of which had 35-foot (10.7-meter)wingspans,
went extinct along with the dinosaurs after an asteroid impact 66
million years ago.
(Reporting by Will Dunham; Editing by Sandra Maler)
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