Xianglong (meaning "flying dragon" in Chinese) is a genus of Cretaceous lizard discovered in the Zhuanchengzi, near Yizhou, Yixian, Liaoning Province of China. It is known from LPM 000666, a single complete skeleton with skin impressions. The specimen comes from the Barremian-aged (Lower Cretaceous) Yixian Formation, near Yizhou. The most notable feature about Xianglong is its bizarre oversized ribs, eight on each side, which were attached to a membrane of body tissue and allowed the lizard to glide, similar to living gliding Draco lizards. While in its original description it was considered to be an acrodont lizard, with a cladistic analysis in the same study suggesting that it was grouped with iguanians such as agamines, chamaeleonids, and leiolepidines, it was later shown that this was due to misinterpretation of the crushed skull, and its affinities with other lizards remains uncertain.

Description

Life restoration

The holotype specimen of Xianglong was 15.5 centimetres (6.1 in) long, 9.5 centimetres (3.7 in) of which was tail, although the describers say it was probably a juvenile. This is indicated by the unossified carpals and poorly-ossified tarsals. Metacarpal IV is shorter than the other metacarpals, and pedal digit V is greatly elongated. The radius and ulna are distally divergent. The body is covered in small, granular scales, showing little size variation. Xianglong had slightly curved claws, indicating that it was arboreal. The ribs of the animal, that functioned as gliding organs, were found in a half-open position, which indicates a post-mortem relaxation of the folded wing. This is currently the only known fossil gliding lizard, though there are other unrelated animals that also use their ribs to glide.

Taxonomy

In the original paper describing it, Xianglong was recovered in a polytomy with the Agaminae, Chamaeleonidae and Leiolepidinae. This was based on the strict consensus of the four most parsimonious trees. Below is the tree recovered by Li et al. (2007):

Kuehneosauridae Marmoretta Rhynchocephalia Iguanidae Xianglong Agaminae Chamaeleonidae Leiolepidinae Polyglyphanodon Macrocephalosaurus Sineoamphisbaena Dibamidae Amphisbaenia Eublepharinae Gekkoninae (sensu lato) Diplodactylinae Pygopodidae Lacertidae Teiidae Gymnophthalmidae Cordylidae Scincidae Anguidae Xenosaurus Shinisaurus Heloderma Lanthanotus Varanus Aigialosauridae Mosasauridae Dolichosauridae Adriosaurus Pachyrhachis Haasiophis Serpentes
Kuehneosauridae
Marmoretta Rhynchocephalia Iguanidae Xianglong Agaminae Chamaeleonidae Leiolepidinae Polyglyphanodon Macrocephalosaurus Sineoamphisbaena Dibamidae Amphisbaenia Eublepharinae Gekkoninae (sensu lato) Diplodactylinae Pygopodidae Lacertidae Teiidae Gymnophthalmidae Cordylidae Scincidae Anguidae Xenosaurus Shinisaurus Heloderma Lanthanotus Varanus Aigialosauridae Mosasauridae Dolichosauridae Adriosaurus Pachyrhachis Haasiophis Serpentes
Marmoretta
Rhynchocephalia Iguanidae Xianglong Agaminae Chamaeleonidae Leiolepidinae Polyglyphanodon Macrocephalosaurus Sineoamphisbaena Dibamidae Amphisbaenia Eublepharinae Gekkoninae (sensu lato) Diplodactylinae Pygopodidae Lacertidae Teiidae Gymnophthalmidae Cordylidae Scincidae Anguidae Xenosaurus Shinisaurus Heloderma Lanthanotus Varanus Aigialosauridae Mosasauridae Dolichosauridae Adriosaurus Pachyrhachis Haasiophis Serpentes
Rhynchocephalia
Iguanidae Xianglong Agaminae Chamaeleonidae Leiolepidinae Polyglyphanodon Macrocephalosaurus Sineoamphisbaena Dibamidae Amphisbaenia Eublepharinae Gekkoninae (sensu lato) Diplodactylinae Pygopodidae Lacertidae Teiidae Gymnophthalmidae Cordylidae Scincidae Anguidae Xenosaurus Shinisaurus Heloderma Lanthanotus Varanus Aigialosauridae Mosasauridae Dolichosauridae Adriosaurus Pachyrhachis Haasiophis Serpentes
Iguanidae Xianglong Agaminae Chamaeleonidae Leiolepidinae
Iguanidae
Xianglong Agaminae Chamaeleonidae Leiolepidinae
Xianglong
Agaminae
Chamaeleonidae
Leiolepidinae
Polyglyphanodon Macrocephalosaurus Sineoamphisbaena Dibamidae Amphisbaenia Eublepharinae Gekkoninae (sensu lato) Diplodactylinae Pygopodidae Lacertidae Teiidae Gymnophthalmidae Cordylidae Scincidae Anguidae Xenosaurus Shinisaurus Heloderma Lanthanotus Varanus Aigialosauridae Mosasauridae Dolichosauridae Adriosaurus Pachyrhachis Haasiophis Serpentes
Polyglyphanodon Macrocephalosaurus Sineoamphisbaena
Polyglyphanodon
Macrocephalosaurus Sineoamphisbaena
Macrocephalosaurus
Sineoamphisbaena
Dibamidae Amphisbaenia Eublepharinae Gekkoninae (sensu lato) Diplodactylinae Pygopodidae Lacertidae Teiidae Gymnophthalmidae Cordylidae Scincidae Anguidae Xenosaurus Shinisaurus Heloderma Lanthanotus Varanus Aigialosauridae Mosasauridae Dolichosauridae Adriosaurus Pachyrhachis Haasiophis Serpentes
Dibamidae Amphisbaenia Eublepharinae Gekkoninae (sensu lato) Diplodactylinae Pygopodidae
Dibamidae Amphisbaenia
Dibamidae
Amphisbaenia
Eublepharinae Gekkoninae (sensu lato) Diplodactylinae Pygopodidae
Eublepharinae
Gekkoninae (sensu lato) Diplodactylinae Pygopodidae
Gekkoninae (sensu lato)
Diplodactylinae Pygopodidae
Diplodactylinae
Pygopodidae
Lacertidae Teiidae Gymnophthalmidae Cordylidae Scincidae Anguidae Xenosaurus Shinisaurus Heloderma Lanthanotus Varanus Aigialosauridae Mosasauridae Dolichosauridae Adriosaurus Pachyrhachis Haasiophis Serpentes
Lacertidae Teiidae Gymnophthalmidae
Lacertidae
Teiidae Gymnophthalmidae
Teiidae
Gymnophthalmidae
Cordylidae Scincidae Anguidae Xenosaurus Shinisaurus Heloderma Lanthanotus Varanus Aigialosauridae Mosasauridae Dolichosauridae Adriosaurus Pachyrhachis Haasiophis Serpentes
Cordylidae Scincidae
Cordylidae
Scincidae
Anguidae Xenosaurus Shinisaurus Heloderma Lanthanotus Varanus Aigialosauridae Mosasauridae Dolichosauridae Adriosaurus Pachyrhachis Haasiophis Serpentes
Anguidae
Xenosaurus Shinisaurus Heloderma Lanthanotus Varanus Aigialosauridae Mosasauridae Dolichosauridae Adriosaurus Pachyrhachis Haasiophis Serpentes
Xenosaurus Shinisaurus
Xenosaurus
Shinisaurus
Heloderma Lanthanotus Varanus Aigialosauridae Mosasauridae Dolichosauridae Adriosaurus Pachyrhachis Haasiophis Serpentes
Heloderma
Lanthanotus Varanus Aigialosauridae Mosasauridae Dolichosauridae Adriosaurus Pachyrhachis Haasiophis Serpentes
Lanthanotus Varanus
Lanthanotus
Varanus
Aigialosauridae Mosasauridae Dolichosauridae Adriosaurus Pachyrhachis Haasiophis Serpentes
Aigialosauridae Mosasauridae
Aigialosauridae
Mosasauridae
Dolichosauridae Adriosaurus Pachyrhachis Haasiophis Serpentes
Dolichosauridae
Adriosaurus Pachyrhachis Haasiophis Serpentes
Adriosaurus
Pachyrhachis Haasiophis Serpentes
Pachyrhachis
Haasiophis
Serpentes

However, in a later 2022 publication, Susan E. Evans said that what the describing authors misinterpreted as acrodont dentition was actually the crushed, jagged broken edge of the jaw, rendering its identification as an iguanian doubtful.

Paleobiology

Gliding ability

Size of Xianglong (blue, bottom) compared to a human hand, the living gliding lizard Draco volans, as well as other unrelated extinct gliding reptiles

Xianglong is one of the few creatures that glide using their ribs. Other creatures, such as the flying squirrel and the Malabar flying frog, Rhacophorus malabaricus, have a different membrane attachment, toes to toes or limb to limb. The living lizard genus Draco (commonly known as flying or gliding lizards) uses its elongated ribs to glide in the same way, though it is not closely related to Xianlong and evolved its gliding apparatus independently. Other analogous fossil reptiles are known from the Triassic period: the kuehneosaurids and Mecistotrachelos, but the Triassic look-alikes lived over 100 million years before Xianglong. Despite the 11-centimetre (4.3 in) "rib-span", the lizard might have been quite agile in the air, possibly to escape the feathered dinosaurs that coexisted with it.

Xu Xing, a Chinese paleontologist and one of the describers of Xianglong, states it is possible that it could have glided as far as half a football field, much further than the modern Draco.

Citations

External links