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Caulkicephalus
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| Caulkicephalus Temporal range: Early Cretaceous,
| |
|---|---|
| Life restoration of Caulkicephalus | |
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Animalia |
| Phylum: | Chordata |
| Class: | Reptilia |
| Order: | †Pterosauria |
| Suborder: | †Pterodactyloidea |
| Family: | †Anhangueridae |
| Subfamily: | †Anhanguerinae |
| Genus: | †Caulkicephalus Steel et al., 2005 |
| Species: | †C. trimicrodon
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| Binomial name | |
| †Caulkicephalus trimicrodon Steel et al., 2005
| |
Caulkicephalus is a genus of anhanguerid pterosaur from the Isle of Wight off the coast of England. It lived during the Early Cretaceous period, about 125 million years ago.
Discovery and naming
[edit]Between 1995 and 2003, bone fragments of an unknown pterosaur were found at the Yaverland locality near Sandown. The discoveries were made in or from a brown clay layer from the Wessex Formation of the Wealden Group, stemming from the Early Cretaceous (Barremian age, about 125 million years ago).[1]
In 2005 a new genus was named and described by Lorna Steel, David Martill, David Unwin and John Winch. The type species is Caulkicephalus trimicrodon. The genus name is a translation of "Caulkhead", a traditional nickname for Isle of Wight residents, partially derived from the Greek kephale, "head". The specific name, trimicrodon, means "three small teeth", in reference to the dentition.[1]
Description
[edit]
The holotype is IWCMS 2002.189.1, 2, 4: three pieces, more or less contiguous, of the front part of a snout. As paratypes have been referred: IWCMS 2002.189.3, a partial posterior skull roof; IWCMS 2003.2, a left quadrate; IWCMS 2003.4, a possible partial jugal; ICWMS 2002.237, a 44 millimeter (1.7 in) long fragment of the first phalanx of the wing finger; IWCMS 2002.234.1-4, four contiguous fragments of a first phalanx, together measuring 245 millimeters (9.6 in) long; IWCMS 2002.233, a possible distal end, 64 millimeters (2.5 in) long, of a second phalanx; IWCMS 2002.236, a fragment of the shaft of possibly the fourth phalanx; and IWCMS 2003.3, a probable fragment of a hindlimb bone. The fossils have only been slightly compressed.[1]
The snout fragments have a combined length of 290 millimeters (11 in). On the snout top the base of a crest is visible, not quite reaching its rounded tip. The teeth have, apart from some replacement teeth present deep in the jaw, been lost but their number, orientation and size can be inferred from the tooth sockets, which however are partly missing at the right side. These are oval and slightly elevated above the jaw bone. The first two tooth pairs were pointed somewhat to the front; the teeth more to the back pointed more sideways; the most posterior preserved stood perpendicular to the jaw. The teeth increased in size until the third pair which was the largest. The fourth pair was equal to the first but the fifth, sixth and seventh pairs were markedly smaller, less than half in size; it is this feature which is recalled by the specific name. Pairs eight, nine and ten again equalled the first. After a narrow hiatus between the second and third snout fragment four tooth sockets are present at each side of the latter, but these are not placed in opposite pairs. The number of teeth in the upper jaw thus seems to have been at least fourteen.[1]
The smaller sized teeth were placed in a constriction of the snout, which thus had a broader end with larger teeth, a so-called "prey grab", usually interpreted as an adaptation to catch slippery prey such as fish.[1]
The posterior skull fragment, a braincase which is rather damaged, shows on its top the base of a parietal crest, probably pointing towards the back. It seems to have been separate from the snout crest.[1]

The layer the fossils were found in, does not consist of marine sediments, but contains land plant debris; this is seen as an indication of a more terrestrial habitat. David Martill estimated Caulkicephalus had a wingspan of around 5 meters (16.5 ft).[1]
Classification
[edit]Caulkicephalus was by the describers assigned to the Ornithocheiridae in view of the narrowing in the middle of the snout. The snout crest was seen as an indication it belonged to the more general Ornithocheiroidea sensu Unwin, whereas the parietal crest was suggested to have been a synapomorphy, a shared new feature, of the more narrow group of the Euornithocheira. Unique characters of the species itself, its autapomorphies, are the details of its dentition, the downward and backward running suture between the premaxilla and maxilla, and the fact the median ridge of the palate begins (or ends) at the ninth tooth pair.[1]
In 2019 however, several studies have reassigned Caulkicephalus to the family Anhangueridae, specifically to the subfamily Anhanguerinae, sister taxon to both Guidraco and Ludodactylus.[2][3][4] The cladogram below is a topology recovered by Rodrigo Pêgas and colleagues in 2019, showing the position of Caulkicephalus within the Anhangueridae.[5]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h Steel, L., Martill, D.M., Unwin, D.M. and Winch, J. D. (2005). "A new pterodactyloid pterosaur from the Wessex Formation (Lower Cretaceous) of the Isle of Wight, England". Cretaceous Research. 26 (4): 686–698. Bibcode:2005CrRes..26..686S. doi:10.1016/j.cretres.2005.03.005.
{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Borja Holgado, Rodrigo V. Pêgas, José Ignacio Canudo, Josep Fortuny, Taissa Rodrigues, Julio Company & Alexander W.A. Kellner, 2019, "On a new crested pterodactyloid from the Early Cretaceous of the Iberian Peninsula and the radiation of the clade Anhangueria", Scientific Reports 9: 4940 doi:10.1038/s41598-019-41280-4
- ^ Kellner, Alexander W. A.; Caldwell, Michael W.; Holgado, Borja; Vecchia, Fabio M. Dalla; Nohra, Roy; Sayão, Juliana M.; Currie, Philip J. (2019). "First complete pterosaur from the Afro-Arabian continent: insight into pterodactyloid diversity". Scientific Reports. 9 (1): 17875. Bibcode:2019NatSR...917875K. doi:10.1038/s41598-019-54042-z. PMC 6884559. PMID 31784545.
- ^ Zhou X., Pêgas R.V., Leal M.E.C. & Bonde N. 2019. "Nurhachius luei, a new istiodactylid pterosaur (Pterosauria, Pterodactyloidea) from the Early Cretaceous Jiufotang Formation of Chaoyang City, Liaoning Province (China) and comments on the Istiodactylidae." PeerJ 7:e7688
- ^ Rodrigo V. Pêgas, Borja Holgado & Maria Eduarda C. Leal (2019) On Targaryendraco wiedenrothi gen. nov. (Pterodactyloidea, Pteranodontoidea, Lanceodontia) and recognition of a new cosmopolitan lineage of Cretaceous toothed pterodactyloids, Historical Biology, doi:10.1080/08912963.2019.1690482
External links
[edit]Caulkicephalus
View on GrokipediaDiscovery and naming
History of discovery
Fossils attributed to Caulkicephalus were collected between 1995 and 2003 from the foreshore near Yaverland, Sandown, on the Isle of Wight, England (National Grid reference SZ 614852).[2] The material was discovered by several independent collectors, including local fossil hunter John D. Winch, who found key elements loose on the beach, with some bones preserved in situ.[2] The holotype specimen, IWCMS 2002.189.1, 2, and 4, consists of three contiguous fragments of the rostrum measuring 290 mm in length and is housed at the Dinosaur Isle Museum in Sandown, part of the Isle of Wight Museum services.[2] Paratypes include the braincase (IWCMS 2002.189.3) and a coracoid (IWCMS 2003.5). Additional referred specimens include IWCMS 2002.233, 2002.234, 2002.236, and 2003.2–4, comprising postcranial elements such as partial vertebrae (IWCMS 2002.233, 2002.234, 2002.236) and ribs (IWCMS 2003.2–4), all derived from terrestrial sediments of the Barremian-age Wessex Formation containing plant debris.[2] Excavation and preparation presented challenges due to the coastal environment's damp conditions, which promoted pyrite decay in the fossils; many elements were coated in iron pyrite or cemented mudstone, requiring careful mechanical preparation to preserve the delicate structures.[2] The genus and species Caulkicephalus trimicrodon were formally named and described in 2005 by Lorna Steel, David M. Martill, David M. Unwin, and John D. Winch in the journal Cretaceous Research .[2] This pterosaur is notable for its size, with an estimated wingspan of around 5 meters.[2]Etymology
The genus name Caulkicephalus is derived from "Caulkhead," an informal nickname for residents of the Isle of Wight, where the type specimen was discovered; this term originates from the historical role of islanders as caulkers—workers who sealed ship hulls with oakum—in the Solent dockyards, combined with the Greek word kephalē meaning "head," in reference to the type locality.[3] The species name trimicrodon combines the Greek roots tri- (three), micro- (tiny or small), and -odon (tooth), alluding to the three small dental alveoli preserved at tooth positions 5 through 7 on the snout of the holotype specimen.[3] The full binomial nomenclature is thus Caulkicephalus trimicrodon, as formally established in the original description by Steel et al. in 2005.[3]Description
Skull and dentition
The holotype specimen of Caulkicephalus trimicrodon (IWCMS 2002.189.1–2, 4) preserves the anterior portion of the rostrum, comprising fragments of the premaxillae and maxillae that articulate to form a continuous section extending posteriorly to approximately the level of the eighth to ninth tooth pairs. The preserved rostrum measures 290 mm in length and is laterally compressed, with the dorsal surface gently arcuate as it rises toward the premaxillary crest.[4] The rostrum terminates in a rounded anterior end, lacking the pointed tip typical of many ornithocheirids. A low, rounded premaxillary crest originates near the anterior margin of the nares and extends posteriorly; the crest is subtly textured with fine grooves and is formed primarily by the premaxillae. Ventrally, the palate features a prominent medial palatal ridge that runs diagonally along its length but terminates posteriorly at the level of the eighth and ninth alveoli, creating a subtly concave palatal surface between the ridge and the alveolar margins.[4] The dentition is heterodont and consists of conical teeth with slightly curved crowns, exhibiting variations in size and spacing along the jaw. The first four pairs of upper teeth increase progressively in size, with the third pair being the largest (crown bases approximately 15 mm in diameter); these are followed by the distinctive "trimicrodon" condition, where the fifth, sixth, and seventh pairs are markedly smaller (crown bases around 6 mm in diameter) and more closely spaced. Posterior teeth, from the eighth pair onward, resume a larger size and wider spacing, with alveoli oval in outline and oriented nearly perpendicular to the jaw margin. At least 11 pairs of alveoli are preserved, with no evidence of replacement teeth in the specimen.[4]Postcranial skeleton
The postcranial skeleton of Caulkicephalus trimicrodon is known exclusively from fragmentary remains associated with the holotype specimen collected from the Wessex Formation. These include the first wing phalanx (phalanx IV-1, 245 mm long), a distal portion of another wing phalanx, shafts of further wing phalanges, a dorsal vertebra, a partial cervical vertebra, and a rib fragment.[4] The preserved wing elements exhibit the elongated proportions characteristic of pterodactyloid pterosaurs, with the phalanges of the fourth manual digit adapted to support the propatagium and main flight membrane via extensor tendon grooves and pneumatic foramina for weight reduction. Comparisons to related anhanguerids, such as Anhanguera and Coloborhynchus, suggest a long fourth metacarpal that would have extended the leading edge of the wing, enhancing aspect ratio for efficient soaring flight. The vertebral elements indicate a robust axial skeleton typical of large anhanguerids. The partial cervical vertebra shows elongation consistent with the flexible neck morphology seen in ornithocheiroids, allowing for a wide range of head movement during foraging. Both the cervical and dorsal vertebrae display pneumaticity, with large foramina for air sac invasion that hollow out the bone interior, reducing overall mass while preserving strength—a key adaptation in pterosaur postcrania for powered flight. The rib fragment lacks diagnostic features but aligns with the slender, pneumatic costal elements of anhanguerids. No hindlimb, pectoral girdle, humerus, or pelvic elements are preserved, limiting direct assessment of those regions, though comparisons to anhanguerid relatives imply reduced hindlimbs with clawed pedal digits suited to terrestrial launching. Overall, the known postcrania reinforce Caulkicephalus's placement among robustly built anhanguerids adapted for aerial lifestyles in coastal environments.[4]Size and proportions
The estimated wingspan of Caulkicephalus trimicrodon is approximately 5 meters, derived from scaling the dimensions of its preserved anterior rostrum to the snout proportions of closely related anhanguerids such as Anhanguera.[5] This estimation aligns with the robust postcranial elements, including the elongated wing phalanx (245 mm for IV-1), which suggest a medium-to-large ornithocheirid build adapted for extended flight. Body mass estimates for Caulkicephalus are approximately 15 to 25 kg, inferred by scaling from related anhanguerids like Anhanguera santanae (wingspan ~4 m, mass ~12 kg) using skeletal mass regression models.[7] These models account for pneumaticity in the skeleton and soft tissue distribution, yielding masses suitable for anhanguerids. Key proportions include long, narrow wings indicative of soaring capabilities and an elongated neck relative to the compact torso, features consistent with its piscivorous lifestyle. In comparative terms, Caulkicephalus is similar in size to Anhanguera (wingspan ~4–5 m) and larger than smaller ornithocheirids, particularly in rostral expansion and limb robustness. The holotype specimen (IWCMS 2002.189.1-2, 4) represents a likely adult individual, as evidenced by the fusion of vertebral elements and mature bone texture without signs of ontogenetic immaturity.[4]Classification
Taxonomic history
Caulkicephalus was formally named and described in 2005 by Steel, Martill, Unwin, and Winch based on a partial skull and postcranial elements from the Wessex Formation of the Isle of Wight, England.[2] The authors classified the new genus within Ornithocheiridae, a family of pterodactyloid pterosaurs characterized by features such as a heterodont dentition and prominent cranial crests, aligning it with other Early Cretaceous ornithocheirids from Europe.[2] In 2013, Rodrigues and Kellner conducted a taxonomic review of the Ornithocheirus complex from the Lower Cretaceous of England, reassigning Caulkicephalus to Anhangueridae.[8] This revision was based on shared cranial features, including an expanded premaxillary tip and enlarged rostral teeth, distinguishing it from broader ornithocheirid groupings and emphasizing Anhangueridae's distinctiveness from synonyms like Boreopteridae.[8] The placement within Anhangueridae was further refined in 2019 by Holgado et al., who classified Caulkicephalus as an anhanguerine through a revised phylogenetic analysis of the clade Anhangueria. They highlighted synapomorphies such as a prominent palatal ridge extending posteriorly along the palate and an enlarged fourth premaxillary tooth larger than adjacent ones, integrating it firmly within Anhanguerinae alongside genera like Anhanguera and Ludodactylus.[9] Early taxonomic debates surrounding Caulkicephalus often stemmed from similarities in cranial crest morphology with Coloborhynchus, leading to initial uncertainties in distinguishing isolated specimens.[2] These were resolved through detailed comparisons of dentition and palatal structures, noting Caulkicephalus's higher tooth count (up to 11 pairs in the premaxilla) and a more pronounced, ridge-like palatal feature absent in Coloborhynchus, which exhibits a quadrangular premaxillary tip and fewer, differently proportioned teeth.[8] The genus Caulkicephalus trimicrodon remains valid, with no proposed synonymy in subsequent studies, supported by its unique combination of autapomorphies including three notably small teeth in the mid-rostrum.[2][8]Phylogenetic position
Caulkicephalus trimicrodon is classified within the family Anhangueridae, a group of toothed pterodactyloid pterosaurs characterized by features such as a concave dorsal skull margin and an anterior premaxillary crest.[9] Specifically, it belongs to the subfamily Anhanguerinae, defined as the stem-based clade containing Anhanguera blittersdorffi but excluding Coloborhynchus clavirostris.[9] This placement positions Caulkicephalus within the broader clade Ornithocheiromorpha, a diverse group of pterosaurs known from the Early Cretaceous.[9] In cladistic analyses, Caulkicephalus occupies a basal position within Anhangueridae relative to more derived genera like Anhanguera.[9] A 2023 analysis recovered it as sister to Guidraco venator, with that pair sister to Ludodactylus sibbicki, supported by shared features such as a diagonal palatal ridge originating near the ninth tooth pair and specialized rostral dentition including notably small alveoli in the fifth to seventh positions.[10] However, a more recent 2025 phylogenetic analysis using an expanded dataset refined this position, recovering Caulkicephalus as the sister taxon to a clade including Anhanguera and Liaoningopterus, with closest relatives encompassing Anhanguera spp., Brasileodactylus araripensis, Guidraco venator, Liaoningopterus gui, Ludodactylus sibbicki, and Maaradactylus kellneri.[1] This topology is supported by synapomorphies including a tapered anterior base of the premaxillary crest, the second premaxillary tooth apex extending anterior to the first, a post-rosette toothline notch in lateral view, and mesialmost maxillary teeth relatively reduced followed by larger mid-maxillary teeth.[1] These taxa represent a subclade within Anhanguerinae, distinct from other anhanguerid subfamilies like Coloborhynchinae and Tropeognathinae.[9] The phylogenetic position of Caulkicephalus was initially refined in a 2019 cladistic analysis by Holgado et al., which employed a dataset of 144 morphological characters scored across 55 pterosaur taxa.[9] Using parsimony methods in TNT software, this study recovered six most parsimonious trees of 336 steps each (consistency index 0.67, retention index 0.87), with Anhangueridae positioned as sister to the newly erected Hamipteridae within Anhangueria.[9] The 2025 analysis by Pêgas further updated this using a dataset of 563 characters across 202 taxa, producing 108 most parsimonious trees of 2268 steps in TNT 1.6, corroborating the anhanguerine placement while refining interrelationships.[1] Subsequent analyses have provided moderate support from character states like the presence of a blade-shaped premaxillary crest and lateralized alveoli.[10] This positioning highlights Caulkicephalus as a key representative of Early Cretaceous pterosaur diversity in Europe, contributing to understanding the global radiation of anhanguerids during the Barremian stage.[9] Its occurrence in the Wessex Formation underscores faunal connections between European and Gondwanan assemblages, as evidenced by similarities with taxa from Brazil and China.[10]Paleobiology
Diet and feeding
Caulkicephalus trimicrodon is interpreted as a piscivore based on its cranial morphology, including an elongated, pointed rostrum and heterodont dentition with large, conical anterior teeth suited for grasping slippery fish. These features parallel those of other ornithocheirids, such as Anhanguera and Coloborhynchus, which exhibit similar adaptations for capturing nektonic prey. The anteroventral orientation of the teeth and anterior upturn of the palate further indicate a strategy for snatching prey from the water surface. Feeding likely involved dip-feeding or contact dip-feeding, where the pterosaur hovered or perched near water to seize fish without prolonged submersion of the head, as biomechanical models have discounted sustained skim-feeding for anhanguerids due to excessive drag and structural stresses on the jaws and crests. Dental microwear texture analysis of related anhanguerids, such as Coloborhynchus, reveals low microwear complexity and anisotropy, consistent with a diet of softer-bodied aquatic prey like fish and invertebrates, rather than hard or abrasive foods.[11] The small size of teeth in positions five through seven may have facilitated retention of smaller, wriggling prey items during capture. In the lagoonal and coastal depositional environment of the Wessex Formation, Caulkicephalus occupied an aerial piscivorous niche, preying on fish in shallow marine or brackish waters with minimal evidence of terrestrial foraging adaptations.Flight and locomotion
Caulkicephalus trimicrodon, an ornithocheirid pterosaur, possessed wings characterized by a high aspect ratio, with elongated and narrow phalanges that facilitated efficient soaring flight over aquatic environments. The first wing phalanx measured 245 mm in length, contributing to an estimated wingspan of approximately 5–6 m, indicative of a structure optimized for reduced drag and sustained gliding. This morphology aligns with that of related ornithocheirids, where the wing membrane was supported by a robust arm skeleton and a specialized pteroid bone that maintained camber in the propatagium, enhancing lift during low-speed maneuvers.[12] On the ground, C. trimicrodon likely employed a quadrupedal stance for locomotion, using its forelimbs in a knuckle-walking posture to support the body weight while minimizing stress on the wings. Takeoff would have involved a transition to bipedal running, aided by powerful thrusts from the forelimbs and initial low-amplitude flapping to achieve airborne velocity; the reduced size of the hindlimbs suggests limited terrestrial mobility, prioritizing aerial efficiency over extensive walking. The robust humerus, with its thick cortical bone, provided the structural integrity necessary for these powerful downstrokes during launch. In flight, C. trimicrodon is inferred to have utilized dynamic soaring, exploiting coastal wind gradients to maintain altitude with minimal energetic cost, a strategy common among ornithocheirids adapted to marine habitats. Estimated cruising speeds ranged from 50 to 60 km/h, based on wing loading and aerodynamic models derived from similar large pterodactyloids, allowing for efficient travel over water. Skeletal adaptations such as pneumatic vertebrae and hollow limb bones further reduced overall mass, with thin compacta (0.1–2.5 mm thick) and internal spongiosa enabling a low wing loading conducive to prolonged gliding. The large body size of C. trimicrodon, with its estimated mass around 20–30 kg, imposed limitations on maneuverability, restricting agile turns but supporting long-distance migration along coastal seaways through sustained soaring. This combination of features underscores a lifestyle centered on aerial prowess rather than terrestrial agility.Paleoecology
Geological setting
The Caulkicephalus fossils were recovered from the Wessex Formation, a lithostratigraphic unit belonging to the Wealden Group of the Lower Cretaceous period, specifically assigned to the Barremian stage and dated approximately 129 to 125 million years ago.[2] This formation represents a significant portion of the non-marine sedimentary succession in the Wessex Basin, characterized by its thickness of up to 120 meters in the type area and its exposure along the southern coast of England.[13] The primary exposures yielding Caulkicephalus material occur in the coastal cliffs of Yaverland, within Sandown Bay on the Isle of Wight in southern England, where ongoing erosion reveals the formation's lower to middle sections.[2] The depositional environment was a complex fluvial-lagoonal system influenced by periodic flooding from a high-sinuosity river network, interspersed with lacustrine and terrestrial settings; this resulted in dominantly fine-grained sediments such as silty mudstones and claystones, with subordinate sandstones forming point bars, crevasse splays, and channel fills, alongside organic-rich layers laden with plant debris.[13] Fossils within the Wessex Formation, including those of Caulkicephalus, are preserved primarily in low-energy depositional contexts like overbank fines and ponded muds, suggesting taphonomic processes involving the flotation or fluvial transport of remains before burial in anoxic, reducing conditions that favored pyrite mineralization and limited disarticulation.[2] The age assignment is supported by biostratigraphic evidence from palynomorphs (pollen and spores) indicative of an upper Barremian assemblage dominated by gymnosperm and fern elements, complemented by charophyte gyrogonites that enable correlation across Wealden sequences; broader radiometric constraints for the Barremian stage derive from dated volcanic ashes in equivalent marine sections elsewhere in Europe, with a recent U-Pb date of 127.3 ± 2.7 Ma from diagenetic calcite in the formation.[14][15]Associated fauna
The Wessex Formation of the Isle of Wight preserves a diverse assemblage of dinosaurs contemporaneous with Caulkicephalus, including spinosaurids such as Ceratosuchops inferodios and Riparovenator milnerae, piscivorous theropods with semi-aquatic lifestyles in riverine environments, alongside material previously referred to cf. Baryonyx.[16] Herbivorous ornithopods such as Iguanodon spp. dominate the large-bodied dinosaur fauna, with abundant remains suggesting they browsed on lowland vegetation, while the small ornithopod Hypsilophodon foxii represents a more agile, possibly cursorial form.[17] Sauropods are less common, represented by indeterminate titanosauriform and rebbachisaurid remains, including a recently described partial hindlimb (NHMUK PV R16500) suggesting adaptation to floodplain habitats.[18] Armored dinosaurs like the nodosaurid Polacanthus foxii add to the herbivore diversity, with osteoderms and skeletal elements indicating defensive adaptations in open terrains.[17] Pterosaurs beyond Caulkicephalus include other ornithocheiroids, notably the istiodactylids Istiodactylus latidens and unnamed relatives, which likely scavenged or fed on small vertebrates in coastal settings.[19] Additional pterosaur diversity encompasses a possible ctenochasmatid (potentially gnathosaurine) and an indeterminate azhdarchoid, reflecting a range of wingspans and feeding strategies from filter-feeding to terrestrial hunting.[19] Other vertebrates include crocodyliforms such as Goniopholis spp. and Bernissartia sp., semi-aquatic predators that inhabited rivers and lagoons alongside fish-eating dinosaurs and pterosaurs.[19] Turtles are represented by paracryptodires like Pleurosternon bullockii and Dorsetochelys sp., with more recent discoveries including the pan-pleurodiran Eodortoka cf. morellana, a side-necked form indicating Gondwanan affinities in this Laurasian ecosystem.[15] Fish assemblages are highly diverse, dominated by actinopterygians such as semionotiforms (Lepidotes), amiiforms, and pycnodontiforms, alongside chondrichthyans like hybodont sharks (Hybodus), which collectively point to productive freshwater and brackish habitats supporting piscivores.[20] Invertebrates feature freshwater bivalves of the Unionidae family, preserved in mudstones and indicating stable aquatic environments.[21] Insects are rare but occur as inclusions in amber from plant debris beds, representing early Cretaceous terrestrial arthropods such as flies and beetles adapted to humid, vegetated floodplains.[22] The flora is conifer-dominated, with taxa like Pseudofrenelopsis and other gymnosperms alongside ferns, cycads, and horsetails, forming a fire- and drought-resistant assemblage suited to a subtropical, seasonal climate with meandering rivers and lagoons.[23] Ecological interactions highlight shared piscivory between Caulkicephalus, spinosaurids, and crocodyliforms, all exploiting abundant fish resources in riverine systems, while Caulkicephalus contributed an aerial dimension to the food web, potentially preying on small vertebrates or scavenging.[16] The overall faunal richness, encompassing over 110 vertebrate genera including dinosaurs, pterosaurs, reptiles, amphibians, mammals, and fishes, underscores a dynamic coastal plain ecosystem with fluvial-lacustrine influences, supporting a mosaic of herbivores, carnivores, and omnivores in a subtropical setting.[17]References
- https://www.[researchgate](/page/ResearchGate).net/publication/222821761_A_new_pterodactyloid_pterosaur_from_the_Wessex_Formation_Lower_Cretaceous_of_the_Isle_of_Wight_England
