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Unusual morphology in the mid-Cretaceous lizard Oculudentavis

Arnau Bolet, Edward L. Stanley, Juan D. Daza, J. Salvador Arias, Andrej Čerňanský, Marta Vidal‐García, Aaron M. Bauer, Joseph J. Bevitt, Adolf Peretti, Susan E. Evans

2021Current Biology27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Oculudentavis khaungraae was described based on a tiny skull trapped in amber. The slender tapering rostrum with retracted narial openings, large eyes, and short vaulted braincase led to its identification as the smallest avian dinosaur on record, comparable to the smallest living hummingbirds. Despite its bird-like appearance, Oculudentavis showed several features inconsistent with its original phylogenetic placement. Here, we describe a more complete specimen that demonstrates Oculudentavis is actually a bizarre lizard of uncertain position. The new specimen is described as a new species within the genus Oculudentavis. The new interpretation and phylogenetic placement highlight a rare case of convergent evolution in skull proportions but apparently not in morphological characters. Our results re-affirm the importance of Myanmar amber in yielding unusual taxa from a forest ecosystem rarely represented in the fossil record.

Topics & Concepts

RostrumBiologyLizardCretaceousSkullPaleontologyPhylogenetic treeTaxonMorphology (biology)Convergent evolutionFossil RecordTeiidaeGenusEvolutionary biologyZoologySauriaGeneBiochemistryFossil Insects in AmberPaleontology and Evolutionary BiologyEvolution and Paleontology Studies
Unusual morphology in the mid-Cretaceous lizard Oculudentavis | Litcius