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Fukuivenator paradoxus
(Azuma et al. 2016, FPDM-V8461, Fig. 1), was originally described as, “a bizarre theropod.” With a specific name like “F. paradoxus,” it’s easy to see there was mystery surrounding this theropod.
Unfortunately, this may just be a case
of taxon exclusion and a sour matrix. No reconstructions were published and several scale bars do not appear to be valid. I had no trouble nesting this theropod. Rather than bizarre, it shares a long list of traits with its new sisters (Figs. 2, 3).
Figure 1. Fukvenator parts to scale lifted from Azuma et al. 2016. Note, the larger skull, hind limb and foot match Zhenyuanlong in size and general morphology. Only the manus is relatively larger. I suspect the smaller skull scale bar.
From the abstract:
“While Fukuivenator possesses a large number of morphological features unknown in any other theropod, it has a combination of primitive and derived features seen in different theropod subgroups, notably dromaeosaurid dinosaurs.”
From the Diagnosis
A relatively small theropod with the following unique features (comments follow):
Figure 2. Ornitholestes, Tianyuraptor and Zhenyuanlong are close relatives of Fukuivenator at the base of the tyrannosaur clade. Gray zone on Ornitholestes skull marks off the boundary of the external naris.
Nowhere in the text
do the authors list Zhenyuanlong, but Tianyuraptor is listed.The large reptile tree (subset fig. 3) nests Fukuivenator between these two basal feathered, winged, tyrannosaurs, not far from Ornitholestes. One tree published by Azuma et al. also nests Fukuivenator with Ornitholestes, but it has many other problems and lacks resolution at several nodes. So we have a tentative agreement with the published work.
Like Ornitholestes and Tianyuraptor
Fukuivenator has an enormous round naris (“all the better to smell you with, my dear~”)
Like Zhenyuanlong and T-rex
Fukuivenator has a taller than wide orbit and deeply rooted teeth. Premaxillary teeth are incisor (‘D’) -shaped.
Figure 2. Fukuiraptor nests with basal tyrannosaurs in the theropod subset of the large reptile tree.
The authors note several dromaeosaurid traits
but Fukuivenator does not have a large killer claw. Fukuivenator actually provides more evidence that basal tyrannosaurs were dromaeosaur mimics, with large wing feathers and stiff tails, just like Microraptor, the bird mimic. Instead of being sharp-eyed predators, as we presume the deinonychosaurs, troodontids and birds were/are, some basal tyrannosaur clade members may have used their nose. So this is where T-rex became “a stellar smeller” back in the Late Jurassic/Early Cretaceous.
Not sure why professional paleontologists
are not seeing these relationships, but I think I smell a sour matrix over there that, like an old sock, has been used to many times without running it through the washer every so often.
As in pterosaurs and turtles and Vancleavea and caseids and mesosaurs…
if you can’t find a good sister taxon among the traditional sister taxa, then maybe you need to look elsewhere. In this case, Fukuivenator does not nest with dromaeosaurs, but very nicely with basalmost tyrannosaurs without paradox or bizarre qualities. I note this, as usual, without seeing the fossil firsthand, for which I am often vilified. This study shows that contributions can be done in paleontology without seeing the fossils firsthand.
References
Azuma Y, Xu X, Shibata1 M, Kawabe S, Miyata K and Imai T 2016. A bizarre theropod from the Early Cretaceous of Japan highlighting mosaic evolution among coelurosaurians. Nature Scientific Reports | 6:20478 | DOI: 10.1038/srep20478