‘Monkeydactyl’ may be the oldest known creature with opposable thumbs

The winged reptile’s dexterity may have helped it climb trees during the age of dinosaurs

illuistration of a pterosaur with opposable thumbs

A newly discovered pterosaur (illustrated) from the Jurassic Period may have used its opposable thumbs to cling to tree branches and catch food such as cicadas.

Chuang Zhao

Future Jurassic Park films could feature one weird new beast in the menagerie: a pterosaur nicknamed Monkeydactyl for its opposable thumbs.

This flying reptile from the Jurassic Period may be the earliest known animal that could touch the insides of its thumbs to the insides of its other fingers, researchers report online April 12 in Current Biology. Such dexterity probably allowed Monkeydactyl to climb trees about 160 million years ago, perhaps to feed on insects and other prey that nonclimbing pterosaurs did not, the researchers say (SN: 12/21/18). The latter half of the creature’s official name, Kunpengopterus antipollicatus, comes from the words “opposite” and “thumb” in ancient Greek.

Monkeydactyl’s fossilized remains, unearthed in northeastern China in 2019, are embedded in rock. So the team used micro-CT scanning to create a 3-D rendering of the fossil. “With this detail, we’re able to look at the fossil from any angle, and make sure that the bones are in their right [original] place,” says study coauthor Rodrigo Pêgas, a paleontologist at the Federal University of ABC in São Bernardo do Campo, Brazil.

fossilized hand of 'Monkeydactyl'
Monkeydactyl’s fossilized hand shows the opposable thumb (pictured, topmost finger) facing the opposite direction of its other clawed fingers.X. Zhou et al/Current Biology 2021
fossilized hand of 'Monkeydactyl'
Monkeydactyl’s fossilized hand shows the opposable thumb (pictured, topmost finger) facing the opposite direction of its other clawed fingers.X. Zhou <em>et al</em>/<em>Current Biology</em> 2021

Those scans helped confirm that the skeleton had a well-preserved opposable thumb on each hand. “Almost all of the modern animals that have opposable thumbs use them to climb trees,” Pêgas says, including primates and some tree frogs. That evidence, along with the apparent flexibility of Monkeydactyl’s joints, suggests this species was well suited to clambering through tree branches.

Previously the staff writer for physical sciences at Science News, Maria Temming is the assistant managing editor at Science News Explores. She has bachelor's degrees in physics and English, and a master's in science writing.

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