Pterosaurs / Dorygnathus
Dorygnathus

Dorygnathus

Art: Joschua Knüppe

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Rhamphorhynchidae

Dorygnathus

/dor-ig-NAY-thus/

This Early Jurassic pterosaur hunted ancient seas with teeth perfect for grasping slippery prey.

Pterosaur data

Age
Toarcian
182.7–174.1 Ma
Wingspan
1.5 m
/ 12 m
Fossil record
good
Well-preserved fossils
Diet
piscivore
Environment
Posidonia Shale

Mesozoic era · 252–66 Ma

Toarcian
Triassic
Jurassic
Cretaceous
252 Ma 201 145 66 Ma

Wingspan

Dorygnathus wingspan comparison
1.5 m (4.9 ft)

About this pterosaur

Dorygnathus was first discovered in rocks of the Posidonia Shale in Germany in the early 19th century and decribed in 1830. The Posidonia Shale was deposited in the Early Jurassic about 180 million years ago and was formed in a shallow sea that covered much of Europe at the time. Since the 1830s many specimens of Dorygnathus have been collected from the original site in Germany as well as in France. Dorygnathus lived alongside another early pterosaur, Campylognathoides, and hunted in seas filled with fish, ammonites, and other cephalopods, as well as marine reptiles like ichthyosaurs and plesiosaurs. 

Dorygnathus, like all known pterosaurs of the Early Jurassic, retained a long tail which may have borne a vertical vane at its tip. The neck of Dorygnathus was somewhat short, being about the same length as the skull. The skull was long and triangular in profile, with the lower jaw coming to a sharp point. The teeth of Dorygnathus are heterodont, showing two major tooth sizes. At the tips of the jaws, the first four tooth positions of the upper jaw and first three tooth positions of the lower jaws bore extremely long and stout teeth. These teeth were pointed away from the jaws in a rosette pattern, and were interfingered when the jaws were closed. Further back in the jaws, the teeth became much smaller and pointed only slightly forward. A large number of specimens of Dorygnathus are known, and the largest examples have wingspans of about 1.5 meters (about 5 feet). 

Dorygnathus was an aerial fisher, using its two different tooth types to help capture prey. The long teeth at the tips of the jaws could both grasp prey and also act as a sieve or net preventing the escape of food. The shorter teeth further back in the jaw are ideally suited to grasping slippery prey items. Dorygnathus probably flew low over the waves and grasped fish or squid that swam close to the surface. 

Dorygnathus has been long regarded a member of the Rhamphorhynchidae, a large family of long-tailed fish-eating pterosaurs known from Jurassic rocks from around the world. Rhamphorhynchidae has two subfamilies, the broader-snouted and shorter-toothed scaphognathines and the pointier-snouted longer-toothed rhamphorhynchines. In a recent phylogenetic analysis by Brian Andres and Timothy Myers, Dorygnathus was found to be the earliest branching member of the rhamphorhynchine lineage. That same study found that rhamphorhynchids were very closely related to the short tailed pterosaur lineage, the pterodactyloids, which first emerged in the Late Jurassic and would come to dominate the Cretaceous skies.

Across the network

Credits

Joschua Knüppe
Joschua Knüppe

Born in 1992 in Mettingen, Germany Began drawing at age 3 2010, diploma (Fachabitur) dicipline design Studying art since 2010 at the Academy for fine Arts Münster Since 2013 in the class of Shana Moulton Since 2014 master student <b>Exhibitions</b> -2012 "Pyrungata", Kunst in der Region, Kloster Gravenhorst -2013 Förderpreisausstellung, Kunsthalle Münster -2013 "Studentennester", Stadtmuseum Münster -2013 "Ausgrabung eines Eurovenator anglicus westfalia", Museumsdorf Detmold -2013 "All Yesterdays", SkF Osnabrück -2014 Förderpreisausstellung, Kunsthalle Münster -2014 "Silvanus" in F24, Münster -2014 "Seeschlangen, schützenswerte Exoten aus den Reiche der Legende", Geomuseum Münster -2015 “Ein lebender Mythos”, Kunstraum Unten, Bochum <b>Scientific work</b> Sachs et al 2015, Cenomanian–Turonian marine amniote remains from the Saxonian Cretaceous Basin of Germany

Illustrator
Vasi Devi
Vasi Devi
Author
Nick Garland
Nick Garland
Exhibit designer
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