Pterosaurs / Germanodactylus
Germanodactylus

Germanodactylus

Art: Julio Lacerda

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Germanodactylidae

Germanodactylus

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Germany's pet pterosaur was probably nothing special, except that it was once classed in the genus Pterodactlyus. This was a common problem with many of its contemporaries, and only recently has it been reclassified.

Pterosaur data

Age
Kimmeridgian
157.3–152.1 Ma
Wingspan
1 m
/ 12 m
Fossil record
partial
Partial skeleton recovered
Diet
piscivore

Mesozoic era · 252–66 Ma

Kimmeridgian
Triassic
Jurassic
Cretaceous
252 Ma 201 145 66 Ma

Wingspan

Germanodactylus wingspan comparison
1 m (3.3 ft)

About this pterosaur

Germanodactylus was yet another Solnhofen pterosaur previously assigned to the then-wastebasket genus Pterodactylus, this time as P. cristatus in allusion to the bony ridge running down its skull. It was included in Pterodactylus by Carl Wiman in 1925, while Yang Zhongjian (aka C.C. Young) reclassified it over four decades later. 

Now there are two species in the genus, the type G. cristatus and probably G. rhamphastinus. Even the second species was once considered to be a member of another genus, this time the defunct Ornithocephalus. 

The name has been around since the early days of paleontology and was used to include many separate genera of pterosaurs. This was actually named earlier than the type species but was only added to Germanodactylus by Wellnhofer in 1970. The name literally means, “German Finger” and is a testament to where it was discovered. 

Today, the genus is considered as a fish-eater living on the dry scrubby islands of the Solnhofen Basin. The wingspan of the type species is slightly under a meter across. We also know that the bony ridge supported a soft tissue crest.

Across the network

Credits

Julio Lacerda
Julio Lacerda

Both illustrator and graphic designer, Julio Lacerda got into paleoart at the age of 17. Wishing to bridge the creativity of reconstructing prehistoric animals and the essence of wildlife documentaries, he seeks to represent dinosaurs and other prehistoric animals as complex and realistic living beings in both appearance and behavior, being protagonists of casual scenes. His work has been published and shown at several countries like Japan (Pterosaurs exhibition, Fukui Prefectural Dinosaur Museum), United Kingdom (All Your Yesterdays by Irregular Books), USA (official publication of Siats meekerorum, North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences) as well as his home country, Brazil.

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