Pterosaurs / Ornithostoma
Ornithostoma

Ornithostoma

Art: Nathan Rogers

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Ornithostoma

/or-nith-oh-STOH-ma/

Long considered a small and early species of pteranodontid, this English pterosaur may be kin to the giant azhdarchids.

Pterosaur data

Age
Maastrichtian
72.1–66 Ma
Fossil record
fragmentary
Known from isolated fragments
Diet
piscivore

Mesozoic era · 252–66 Ma

Maastrichtian
Triassic
Jurassic
Cretaceous
252 Ma 201 145 66 Ma

About this pterosaur

Harry Govier Seeley named the pterosaur genus Ornithostoma in 1871 for a snout fragment found in the Lower Cretaceous Cambridge Greensand Formation of England. Seeley later named the species O. sedgwicki in 1891, as he didn’t give the genus a species name 20 years earlier. The name is Greek for “bird mouth” referring to its toothless bill. Over time additional pterosaur bones from the same formation have been referred to Ornithostoma, including a skull roof with the base of a crest, and various postcranial fragments. 

The original specimen is a portion of the skull from the middle portion of the rostrum. This fragment is about 5 cm (2 inches) long, 2.5 cm (1 inch) tall, and 2 cm (3/4 inch) wide. Although it is missing the tip of the jaws, the fossil shows that the beak was toothless, gently tapering, and would have extended another 10 cm (4 inches). When seen from above, the jaws also gently taper toward the tip, but the rear-most part of the preserved skull appears to bulge significantly. There are low bony ridges on the lower surface of the fragment, and the entire rostrum appeared to have been covered in beak tissue. 

Because the fragment was most similar to Pteranodon, known from Upper Cretaceous rocks in the central US, many paleontologists in the early 20th Century considered Pteranodon to be the same genus as Ornithostoma, with the Kansan species known as Ornithostoma longiceps. This wasn’t universally accepted however, with many pointing out that Ornithostoma lived 15-20 million years before Pteranodon, was much smaller, and had subtle anatomical differences.

The referred skull roof fragment includes part of the eye socket, the temples, and the base of a large crest extending behind the rest of the skull. Unfortunately, there are no overlapping parts between the rostrum and skull roof fragments, so it’s impossible to tell if they actually came from the same animal, and many authors have doubted their association. 

Ornithostoma was long considered to be a pteranodontid because of its tapering, toothless rostrum, and head crest in the referred specimen. In 2012 Alexander Averianov redescribed Ornithostoma and concluded that it was actually an azhdarchoid bearing striking similarities to the rostra of both chaoyangopterids and azhdarchids. Averianov considered the skull roof fragment as belonging to Ornithostoma, noting that it was much more similar to tapejarids and chaoyangopterids than it is pteranodontids. Other isolated azhdarchoid bones from the Cambridge Greensand, including moderately elongate cervical vertebrae were also referred to this species by Averianov. 

Without more material or definitive associations between the isolated bones referred to Ornithostoma it’s impossible to estimate its size more precisely. The Cambridge Greensand Formation was deposited under a warm shallow sea more than 100 million years ago. Ornithostoma may have fished, or hunted terrestrial prey on beaches or farther inland.

Across the network

Credits

Nathan Rogers
Nathan Rogers

Nathan has been a lifelong student of evolution and the diversity of life on Earth. After earning a BS in Zoology, he worked in university animal behavior labs, in agricultural fields, as part of a wildlife management field crew for a county level park system in the Midwestern US, and in various positions in science and natural history museums, all the while drawing dinosaurs and other prehistoric lifeforms in his free time. His primary artistic medium is Photoshop, used as a digital painting tool with a Wacom tablet as an input device. Some of his work can be seen in person as part of exhibits at Dinosaur State Park in Connecticut and the Perot Museum of Nature and Science in Dallas, Texas. Nathan's hope for paleoart is that it will be enjoyable to view, while also inspiring people to learn more about science and the history and potential future of life.

Illustrator
Pete Buchholz
Pete Buchholz
Author
Nick Garland
Nick Garland
Exhibit designer
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