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Yutyrannus
Temporal range: Late Cretaceous
Yutyrannus
Brian Choo's illustration of Yutyrannus huali
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryote
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Sauropsida
Clade: Dinosauria
Order: Saurischia
Suborder: Theropoda
Family: Proceratosauridae
Subfamily: Tyrannosaurinae
Genus: Yutyrannus
Species: Y. hualii
Type species
Yutyrannus huali

Yutyrannus, name meaning "Feathered Tyrant", is a proceratosaurid theropod dinosaur genus that contains a single type species, Yutyrannus huali, named and described in 2012 by Xu Xing, Wang Kebai, Zhang Ke, Ma Qingju, Xing Lida, Corwin Sullivan, Hu Dongyu, Cheng Shuqing and Wang Shuo. The generic name is derived from Mandarin Chinese yu, “feather” and Latinised Greek τύραννος, tyrannos, “tyrant”, a reference to the fact it is a feathered member of the Tyrannosauroidea. The specific name consists of the Mandarin huáli, “beautiful”, in reference to the beauty of the plumage.

Yutyrannus is known from three nearly complete fossil specimens (an adult, a subadult, and a juvenile) acquired from a fossil dealer who claimed all three had their provenance in a single quarry at Batuyingzi in Liaoning Province, China. They thus probably were found in a layer of the Yixian Formation, dating from the Aptian, about 125 million years old. The specimens had been cut into pieces about the size of bath mats, which could be carried by two people.

The holotype, ZCDM V5000, is the largest specimen, consisting of a nearly complete skeleton with skull, compressed on a slab, of an adult individual. The paratypes are the two other specimens: ZCDM V5001 consisting of a skeleton of a smaller individual and part of the same slab as the holotype; and ELDM V1001, a juvenile estimated to have been eight years younger than the holotype. The fossils are part of the collections of the Zhucheng Dinosaur Museum and the Erlianhaote Dinosaur Museum but have been prepared by the Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology, under the guidance of Xu.

Description[]

Yutyrannus size chart

Size of Yutyrannus compared to a human

Yutyrannus was a gigantic bipedal predator. The holotype has a known length of 9 metres (30 feet) and an estimated weight of 1,414 kilograms(3,120 lbs). Its skull has an estimated length of 905 millimeters (35.6 in). The skulls of the paratypes are 80 and 63 centimeters (31 in and 25 in) long and their weights have been estimated at 596 and 493 kilograms (1,314 lb and 1,087 lb) respectively.

The describers established some diagnostic traits of Yutyrannus, in which it differs from its direct relatives. The snout features a high midline crest, formed by the nasals and the premaxillae and which is covered by large pneumatic recesses. The postorbital has a small secondary process, jutting into the upper hind corner of the eye socket. The outer side of the main body of the postorbital is hollowed out. In the lower jaw, the external mandibular fenestra, the main opening in the outer side, is mainly located in the surangular.

Feathers[]

While it has been known since 2004, upon the description of Dilong, that at least some tyrannosaurs possess filamentous “stage 1″ feathers, according to the feather typology of Richard Prum, Y. huali is currently the largest known species of dinosaur with direct evidence of feathers, forty times heavier than the previous record holder, Beipiaosaurus. The feathers were long, up to twenty centimeters, and filamentous. Because the quality of the preservation was low, it could not be established whether the filaments were simple or compound, broad or narrow. The feathers covered various parts of the body. With the holotype, they were present on the pelvis and the foot.

Specimen ZCDM V5000 had feathers on the tail pointing backward under an angle of 30° with the tail axis. The smallest specimen showed twenty-centimeter-long filaments on the neck and sixteen-centimeter-long feathers at the upper arm. Based on this distribution, they may have covered the whole body and served in regulating temperature, given the rather cold climate of the Yixian with an average annual temperature of 10°C. Alternatively, if they were restricted to the regions in which they were found they may have served as display structures. In addition, the two adult specimens had distinctive, “wavy” crests on their snouts, on both sides of a high central crest, which were probably used for display. The presence of feathers on a large basal tyrannosauroid suggests the possibility that later tyrannosaurids were also feathered, even when adult, despite their size.

Phylogeny[]

Feathersyutyrannus

A close up of Yutyrannus' bristle-like feathers.

Yutyrannus was by the describers assigned to the Tyrannosauroidea in 2012. A cladistic analysis showed it occupied a rather basal position, below Eotyrannus in the evolutionary tree, but above forms such as Dilong, Guanlong and Sinotyrannus. Basal traits included long forelimbs with three fingers and a short, non-arctometatarsalian, foot. Derived traits include a large and deep skull, the outer side of the premaxilla having rotated upwards, a large cuneiform horn on the lacrimal in front of the eye socket, a postorbital process on the back rim of the eye socket, the squamosal and the quadratojugal forming a large process on the back rim of the infratemporal fenestra, short dorsal vertebrae, an ilium with a straight upper rim and an appending lobe, a large pubic foot and a slender ischium.

Darren Naish pointed out that the species resembles carcharodontosaurs and allosauroids such as Concavenator, especially in some for a tyrannosaurs unusual features of the skull, such as the pneumatic recesses on the snout crest, the secondary postorbital process and the form of the postorbital boss.

Paleobiology[]

The presence of specimens of a different age allows to determine the ontogeny. During growth the lower legs, the feet, ilium and the forelimbs became relatively smaller. The skull on the other hand, grew more robust and deeper.

Classification[]

To date, all phylogenetic analyses of Yutyrannus's relationships have classified it in the group Tyrannosauroidea. An initial analysis of its relationship to other tyrannosauroids showed that it was more primitive than Eotyrannus in the evolutionary tree, but more advanced than tyrannosauroids such as Dilong, Guanlong and Sinotyrannus. Primitive traits relative to advanced tyrannosaurs included long forelimbs with three fingers and a short foot which was not specialized for running. Advanced traits included a large and deep skull, the outer side of the premaxilla having rotated upwards, a large cuneiform horn on the lacrimal in front of the eye socket, a postorbital process on the back rim of the eye socket, the squamosal and the quadratojugal forming a large process on the back rim of the infratemporal fenestra, short dorsal vertebrae, an ilium with a straight upper rim and an appending lobe, a large pubic foot and a slender ischium.

In popular culture[]

  • Yutyrannus appears in the mobile game Jurassic World: The Game, though it can currently only be seen in the Battle Arena and could not be created for the players. That was until a tournament was released allowing players to create it. Unlike most creatures that share its model, it has an accurate number of fingers: 3.
  • It appeared in James Gurney's documentary TYRANNOSAURS: Behind the Art, where a Yutyrannus try's to steal a kill from a pack of Dilong.
  • In Fossil Fighters Frontier, Yutyrannus elemental AR cards can be scanned. You are able to obtain a Fire, Water, Air, and Earth version of the dinosaur.
  • Yutyrannus appears in ARK: Survival Evolved.
  • A Female Yutyrannus & her 2 juveniles were featured in a documentary Life on Earth: A New Prehistory (AKA Ancient Earth) where they were chasing down a Microraptor despite the fact that they would've never met. A family of northern "Yutyrannus" featured in "The Mystery of The Feathered Dragons" where they hunted a "Sinosauropteryx". Another family passed a mating pair of "Confuciusornis", but didn’t notice them. The difference between the two variations being were the longer filamentous feathers on the northern variants.
  • Yutyrannus will appear in Prehistoric Kingdom.
  • Yutyrannus made a minor appearance on the 2022 PBS NOVA episode Alaskan Dinosaurs.
  • Yutyrannus appears in Jurassic World Evolution 2 via the Feathered Species Pack released on March 30th, 2023.
  • Yutyrannus appears in Jurassic World Alive as an omega rarity creature.

Other Wikis[]

References[]

Gallery[]

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