Rhamphorhynchus

genus of pterosaurs
(Redirected from Rhamphorhynchoidea)

Rhamphorhynchus is a genus of long-tailed pterosaurs in the Upper Jurassic. It is the best-known of the long-tailed pterosaurs, the sub-order Rhamphorynchoidea.

Rhamphorhynchus
Temporal range: Upper Jurassic 150–148 mya
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Suborder:
Rhamphorhynchoidea
Family:
Rhamphorhynchidae
Genus:
Rhamphorhynchus
Several Rhamphorhynchus (flying) and a perching Pterodactylus, by Heinrich Harder, 1916.

Rhamphorhynchus had a long tail, stiffened with ligaments, which ended in a small diamond-shaped rudder that helped provide stability while flying.

The jaws of Rhamphorhynchus housed needle-like teeth, which were angled forward, with a curved, sharp, beak-like tip lacking teeth. Their diet was mainly fish and insects.

Like other pterosaurs, its body was covered with hairs, which suggests it had temperature regulation ('hot-blooded') and a high rate of metabolism. This is also found in birds and bats, and seems necessary for active flight.

The genus was quite successful: it is the most common pterosaur found in the Solnhofen limestone beds in Bavaria, Germany. These are the same strata where Archaeopteryx was found.

Rhamphorhynchoids

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This early group flourished from the Upper Triassic to the end of the Jurassic. When we first see them in the fossil record they have developed three families, so biologists know their early evolution is not yet revealed.[1]p240, 246 These three families are represented by the three genera Rhamphorhynchus, Dimorphodon and Eudimorphodon. This sub-order was the earliest kind or pterosaur, which were succeeded by the more 'derived' short-tailed pterosaurs, the Pterodactyloids, such as Pterodactylus. In the Upper Jurassic both the two sub-orders were extant (living).

 
Rhamphorhynchus, Musée d'histoire naturelle de Bruxelles

The group always has a long tail, stiffened by rod-like bony tendons to keep it straight. This indicates their flight was extremely stable, which means it kept on course, and did not dart about much.[2] This feature is also found in Archaeopteryx and in early bats, and in insects like dragonflies.

It can be interpreted like this. To dart about quickly requires special advanced brains and reflexes to keep control. Later birds and pterosaurs had extra 'control wiring' in their brains, but early ones did not. The evidence for this is the extra size of pterodactyl and bird brains compared with the reptile brains the groups started out with. That much of this increase is connected to seeing and flying is clear from how bird brains work.[3]

The analogy would be planes. Early planes were highly stable, and so are airliners. Fighter planes are fundamentally much less stable, and have to be in order to jink about. This needs such fast reactions that the details are worked out by computer, with the pilot indicating where to go.

It requires more 'brains' to control an unstable craft than it does a stable one. And the same principle applies to pterosaurs, birds and bats. Early birds, bats, pterosaurs and insects were all more stable, with tails or (insects) long abdomens. This helped the flying animal to keep on track, which is what we mean by 'stable'.

All species in the group have teeth. The group died out at the end of the Jurassic, which suffered a minor extinction event.[1]p270

Taxonomy

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This classification is simple, but unfortunately it is paraphyletic, because the two suborders are not sister groups. But there is not enough evidence to see which earlier group the pterodactyloids arose from. So this is the best we can do: [4]

  • Pterosauria
    • Rhamphorhynchoidea
      • Dimorphodontidae
      • Anurognathidae
      • Rhamphorhynchidae
        • Scaphognathinae
        • Rhamphorynchinae
    • Pterodactyloidea

References

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  1. 1.0 1.1 Wellnhofer, Peter 1991. The illustrated encyclopedia of pterosaurs. London, Salamander. Reprinted as part 2 of The illustrated encyclopedia of dinosaurs. London, Salamander, 2000.
  2. A bit more technically: in stable movement deviations cause air pressure which tends to keep the object on course; it is self-correcting. This is a plus and a minus. The plus is that the stalling speed is low, and the system is simpler to control (less brains). The minus is that the flying object finds it less easy to dart around.
  3. Both pterosaurs and birds have greatly enlarged neurological structure critical to flight. They have an extra large cerebellum, the part of the brain which controls balance and the details of movement. [1] Archived 2020-09-18 at the Wayback Machine
  4. Unwin D.M. 2003. "On the phylogeny and evolutionary history of pterosaurs". In Buffetaut E. & Mazin J.-M. (eds) Evolution and Palaeobiology of Pterosaurs. London: Geological Society of London, Special Publications 217, pp. 139–190.