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Natural History: FIELD GUIDE
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home > natural history Shenzhouraptor sinensis |
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Shenzhouraptor was a fairly primitive bird for its time, a relic in its own environment. It lived alongside a wide array of more advanced ribbon-tailed Opposite Birds (enantiornithines) and even the modern-looking true fan-tailed birds (ornithuromorphs). Shenzhouraptor, though, retained the primitive skeleton, long, bony frond-tipped tail, and even a "sickle claw" on the foot remeniscant of its cousins the dromaeosaurids. Still, it possessed some advanced features, like its nearly toothless jaws (it had several tiny teeth in the lower one) and very long arms, longer than the legs. Its shoulder girdle was strong compared to more primitive birds but still strong enough for only clumsy powered flight at best--it lacked the strange parallel flight adaptations birds like Confuciusornis developed independently of modern birds. Thanks to the preserved contents of the stomach in one specimen, we know that Shenzhouraptor was at least partially a fruit or grain eater, ingesting large amounts of seeds (probably from some coniferous plant). Here, it's depicted perched on top of a tree fern stump to get at the juicy aril-covered seeds of a yew tree (Taxus sp., the fossils of which are also found among the Jehol biota of early Cretaceous age Northwestern China). The colors are speculative, though study of melanosomes may eventually reveal the actual feather color. I've given it a crown of brght red and yellow; vivid colors require a diet rich in carotenoids from fruit and seeds, or fruit-eating insects. One note on the name: Shenzhouraptor sinensis was named within days of its likely synonym, Jeholornis prima ("primitive Jehol bird"). The authors of each name have made the case that theirs is correct. As both were published in the same month, whichever paper can be shown to have been distributed earlier wins out. Jeholornis was published on July 25 2002 in the weekly journal Nature. Shenzhouraptor was published in the Geological Bulletin of China, a monthly journal. Normally, absent any further evidence, the weekly journal wins because it comes with a specific date of publication. However, press releases that accompanied the Shenzhouraptor paper are dated July 23 2002, so Shenzhouraptor gets priority by two days. Image Details:
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