Ultrastenos

Ultrastenos is an extinct genus of Australian mekosuchine crocodilian first described in 2016. The type species Ultrastenos willisi was discovered at Riversleigh in northwestern Queensland, Australia, and lived during the Late Oligocene era. Following its discovery, it was speculated that Ultrastenos was a slender-snouted animal similar to modern gharials or freshwater crocodiles and that it may have inhabited forest pools and fed on small vertebrates like frogs and lizards. This is based on the peculiar shape of its mandible, which is wide towards the base of the head but constricts rapidly, leading into a narrow and gracile rostrum. Assuming that the holotype skull belonged to an adult individual, Ultrastenos may have been a rather small animal, approximately the size of a modern freshwater crocodile. However, Ultrastenos is only known from very fragmentary remains and thus among the most enigmatic mekosuchines. In a 2023 study multiple authors argue that the fragmentary nature of the animal means that further studies are required to truly test the hypothesis proposed in its original description, especially following the discovery of what is thought to have been a close relative.

Ultrastenos
Temporal range: Late Oligocene,
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Clade: Archosauromorpha
Clade: Archosauriformes
Order: Crocodilia
Clade: Mekosuchinae
Genus: Ultrastenos
Stein et al., 2016
Type species
Ultrastenos willisi
Stein et al., 2018
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