Australian pterosaur had an enormous tongue to assist gulp down prey

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An illustration of the newly recognized species, known as Haliskia peterseni

Gabriel Ugueto

A 100-million-year-old fossil pterosaur present in Australia could have had the biggest and most muscular tongue of all its family.

The fossil was present in 2021 by Kevin Petersen, the curator at Kronosaurus Korner, a museum close to the outback city of Richmond in Queensland.

Usually with pterosaurs – flying reptiles that inhabited Earth concurrently dinosaurs – you would possibly discover one bone, says Petersen. “But as I started to dig around, more and more bone started to show and I realised I needed to go very carefully,” he says.

Almost 1 / 4 of the skeleton has now been recovered, making it essentially the most full pterosaur ever discovered by scientists in Australia.

Your complete decrease jaw was preserved, together with a part of the higher jaw, vertebrae, ribs, and leg and toes bones. However most shocking was the preservation of the extraordinarily delicate throat bones, only a few millimetres in diameter, which reminded Petersen of spaghetti.

A staff led by Adele Pentland at Curtin College in Perth realised the fossil belonged to a wholly new genus and species within the Anhangueria household of pterosaurs, that are discovered globally. The creature is estimated to have had a wingspan of 4.6 metres. In honour of Petersen, it has been named Haliskia peterseni.

Though unrelated to birds, it could have appeared a bit like an enormous pelican, says Petersen. However Pentland says it could have been a “demon pelican” as a result of it had a mouth stuffed with spiky tooth.

What units H. peterseni aside from another identified pterosaur is that its throat bones are a lot bigger, indicating that it had an enormous, muscular tongue, says Pentland.

The staff thinks the tongue was used to catch and maintain prey, in all probability slippery animals equivalent to squid and fish. As soon as prey was grabbed by its jaws, H. peterseni’s tooth would have closed like a zipper or cage, stopping escape, says Pentland.

Like a pelican, it in all probability swallowed its prey complete, she says. The tongue was additionally in all probability used to push the meal down into its throat.

Throughout the Cretaceous Interval, when H. peterseni lived, what’s now inland Queensland was lined by ocean, which was the pterosaur’s looking floor.

“It was really breathtaking to see the remains of this fossil animal and to imagine the abundance of life that must have been there at that time and how very different it would have been to what we see in outback Queensland today,” says Pentland.

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