Saturday, October 10, 2015

October unleashed. Quetzalcoatlus

Named after the‭ ‘‬feathered serpent‭’ ‬god of Mesoamerica,‭ ‬Quetzalcoatlus has really soared to the top among popular pterosaurs.‭ ‬When first discovered it was thought to have had a fifteen meter wingspan but further studies have reduced this estimate to eleven meters,‭ ‬although that‭’‬s still huge for a pterosaur.‭ ‬Another revision was the beak in that it has been learned that it terminated in a sharp point as opposed to the original blunt edge.
       How Quetzalcoatlus fed is open to much debate.‭ ‬Initially it was thought to be a scavenger,‭ ‬but the beak is not suited to the task of stripping flesh from a carcass as the beak did not close completely.‭ ‬The replacement hypothesis was that it skimmed across bodies of water,‭ ‬snatching fish out of the water with its beak as it flew overhead.‭ ‬Although plausible,‭ ‬when the theory was applied to a creature the size of Quetzalcoatlus it was found that it would be too far too much energy expenditure for it to be a viable method of feeding.‭
       A more likely scenario accepted now is that Quetzalcoatlus had a lifestyle similar to that of a stork,‭ ‬perhaps stalking small prey items like lizards and mammals in vegetative growth on the ground,‭ ‬or sitting at the edges of streams and rivers snatching fish and amphibians as they swam by.‭ ‬Such feeding strategies would require very little energy expenditure,‭ ‬making it easier for Quetzalcoatlus to maintain the calorie intake to fuel its body.


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