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Pulaosaurus

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pulaosaurus
Holotype of Pulaosaurus
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Clade: Dinosauria
Clade: Ornithischia
Clade: Neornithischia
Genus: Pulaosaurus
Yang, King, & Xu, 2025
Species:
P. qinglong
Binomial name
Pulaosaurus qinglong
Yang, Kang, & Xu, 2025

Pulaosaurus (meaning "Pulao lizard") is an extinct genus of neornithischian dinosaur from the mid-Jurassic (CallovianOxfordian ages) Tiaojishan Formation of Hebei, China. The genus contains a single species, Pulaosaurus qinglong, known from a nearly complete articulated skeleton including the skull and soft tissue impressions. It is one of the only non-avian dinosaurs known to preserve a larynx (voicebox), suggesting it may have made bird-like vocalizations. Pulaosaurus is the first neornithischian named from the Yanliao Biota, though members of this clade have been known from other fossil beds of the same age for much longer.[1]

Discovery and naming

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The Pulaosaurus holotype, IVPP V30936, consists of a nearly complete, immature 72.2 cm (2 ft 4.4 in) long specimen including most of the skull and a nearly complete postcranium. It includes bones that are not often preserved in dinosaurs, including the hyoid bone and an ossified larynx, as well as cololites (traces of stomach contents).[1]

Pulaosaurus was described as a new genus and species of ornithischian dinosaurs in 2025. The generic name, Pulaosaurus, refers to the Pulao, dragon in Chinese mythology said to make loud sounds, alluding to the possible bird-like vocalizations made by this taxon. The specific name, qinglong, refers to Qinglong County, Hebei, where the fossil was excavated.[1]

Paleobiology

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The holotype preserves an ossified larynx, or voicebox, which is the second time one has been found in an ornithischian, after the ankylosaur Pinacosaurus.[2] Like the latter taxon, it suggests that Pulaosaurus probably made bird-like vocalizations. The holotype specimen preserves gut contents similar to that of the ankylosaur Minmi, which have been suggested to be plant seeds.[1]

Classification

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Yang, King, & Xu (2025) performed two phylogenetic analyses to determine the relationships of Pulaosaurus. The first used the phylogenetic matrix of Han et al. (2018),[3] focused on the relationships of basal neornithischians. The second used the matrix of Fonseca et al. (2024),[4] which tests the relationships of ornithischians as a whole. This analysis placed Pulaosaurus as the basalmost neornithischian, followed by Agilisaurus. When running the analysis with implied weight K=12, Agilisaurus was recovered as the basalmost neornithischian, with Pulaosaurus found to be in the next-diverging clade as the sister taxon to Sanxiasaurus. A cladogram adapted from the latter analysis is shown below:[1]

Neornithischia

Paleoenvironment

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The only known Pulaosaurus fossil was found in rocks assigned to the Tiaojishan Formation, dating to the Callovian-Oxfordian age of the Middle-Late Jurassic,[5] dated to approximately 159 million years ago.[6] This is the same formation (and around the same age) as the scansoriopterygids Yi, Epidexipteryx, and Scansoriopteryx. The ecosystem preserved in the Tiaojishan Formation is a forest dominated by bennettitales, ginkgo trees, conifers, and leptosporangiate ferns. These forests surrounded large lakes in the shadow of active volcanoes, ash from which was responsible for the remarkable preservation of many of the fossils. Based on the Tiaojishan's plant life, its climate would have been subtropical to temperate, warm and humid.[7] Other vertebrate fossils found in the same rock quarry as Yi qi, which would have been close contemporaries, included salamanders like Chunerpeton tianyiensis, the flying pterosaurs Changchengopterus pani, Dendrorhynchoides mutoudengensis, and Qinglongopterus guoi, dinosaurs like Tianyulong confuciusi, basal birds like Anchiornis huxleyi, Caihong juji, and Eosinopteryx brevipenna, and finally as the early gliding[8] mammaliaform species Arboroharamiya jenkinsi.[5]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e Yang, Y.; King, J. L.; Xu, X. (2025). "A new neornithischian dinosaur from the Upper Jurassic Tiaojishan Formation of northern China". PeerJ. 13 e19664. doi:10.7717/peerj.19664.
  2. ^ Yoshida, Junki; Kobayashi, Yoshitsugu; Norell, Mark A. (2023-02-15). "An ankylosaur larynx provides insights for bird-like vocalization in non-avian dinosaurs". Communications Biology. 6 (1): 152. doi:10.1038/s42003-023-04513-x. ISSN 2399-3642. PMC 9932143. PMID 36792659.
  3. ^ Fenglu Han; Catherine A. Forster; Xing Xu; James M. Clark (2017). "Postcranial anatomy of Yinlong downsi (Dinosauria: Ceratopsia) from the Upper Jurassic Shishugou Formation of China and the phylogeny of basal ornithischians". Journal of Systematic Palaeontology. 16 (14): 1159–1187. Bibcode:2018JSPal..16.1159H. doi:10.1080/14772019.2017.1369185. S2CID 90051025.
  4. ^ Fonseca, A.O.; Reid, I.J.; Venner, A.; Duncan, R.J.; Garcia, M.S.; Müller, R.T. (2024). "A comprehensive phylogenetic analysis on early ornithischian evolution". Journal of Systematic Palaeontology. 22 (1): 2346577. Bibcode:2024JSPal..2246577F. doi:10.1080/14772019.2024.2346577.
  5. ^ a b Xu, Xing; Zheng, Xiaoting; Sullivan, Corwin; Wang, Xiaoli; Xing, Lida; Wang, Yan; Zhang, Xiaomei; O’Connor, Jingmai K.; Zhang, Fucheng & Pan, Yanhong (7 May 2015). "A bizarre Jurassic maniraptoran theropod with preserved evidence of membranous wings". Nature. 521 (7550): 70–73. Bibcode:2015Natur.521...70X. doi:10.1038/nature14423. PMID 25924069. S2CID 205243599.
  6. ^ Yu, Zhiqiang; He, Huaiyu; Li, Gang; Deng, Chenglong; Wang, Hai-Bing; Zhang, Xinxin; Yang, Qing; Xia, Xiao-Ping; Zhou, Zhonghe & Zhu, Rixiang (2019). "SIMS U-Pb geochronology for the Jurassic Yanliao Biota from Bawanggou section, Qinglong (northern Hebei Province, China)". International Geology Review. 63 (3): 265–275. doi:10.1080/00206814.2019.1707127. S2CID 212957272.
  7. ^ Wang, Yongdong; Saiki, Ken'ichi; Zhang, Wu & Zheng, Shaolin (2006). "Biodiversity and palaeoclimate of the Middle Jurassic floras from the Tiaojishan Formation in western Liaoning, China". Progress in Natural Science. 16 (9): 222–230. doi:10.1080/10020070612330087A (inactive 1 November 2024). Archived from the original on 13 February 2021. Retrieved 29 May 2020.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of November 2024 (link)
  8. ^ Han, Gang; Mao, Fangyuan; Bi, Shundong; Wang, Yuanqing & Meng, Jin (2017). "A Jurassic gliding euharamiyidan mammal with an ear of five auditory bones". Nature. 551 (7681): 451–456. Bibcode:2017Natur.551..451H. doi:10.1038/nature24483. PMID 29132143. S2CID 4466953.