Fossils of Akharhynchus were first unearthed in an unknown locality near the town of Tafilat in Errachidia Province, southern Morocco. The remains found consist of an isolated premaxilla (upper jaw tip) fragment of a pterosaur, which was found by a commercial fossil dealer who sold it to the Faculté des Sciences Aïn Chock. There it was deposited under specimen number FSAC-KK 12500. Based on the matrix it is preserved in and comparisons with other specimens, it presumably originates from the upper Ifezouane Formation, like many other pterosaurs.[1] The Ifezouane Formation is a formation in the Kem Kem Group, which dates to the Cenomanian and perhaps Albian stages of the Cretaceousperiod.[1][2]
In 2024, an international team of paleontologists including British researcher Megan Jacobs, British researcher Roy Smith & Moroccan researcher Samir Zouhri described this fossil as belonging to a new genus and species of pterosaur, which they named Akharhynchus martilli. The generic name, Akharhynchus, combines the Arabic word akhar, meaning "another", with the Greek word rynchus, meaning "snout". The specific name, martilli, references paleontology researcher David Martill.[1]
Akharhynchus is one of at least ten purportedly distinct pterosaur genera recovered from the Kem Kem Group. About half of these are ornithocheirids. Besides Akharhynchus, these include Anhanguera, Coloborhynchus, Ornithocheirus, and Siroccopteryx.[1] Discussions on Kem Kem pterosaurs have noted the problematic practice of naming taxa based on such fragmentary remains, even in the presence of seemingly diagnostic characters. As every pterosaur from these localities is established based on fragmentary rostral and mandibular remains, detailed comparisons are limited. Consequently, the effects of sexual dimorphism and ontogenetic and interspecific variation on perceived diversity are challenging to identify.[2]
Description
The holotype consists of the anteriormost portion of both premaxillae, preserving three pairs of alveoli (tooth holes) and an incomplete fourth pair. The first pair and the left alveolus of the second pair have broken tooth crowns. As for measurements, the specimen is 53 millimetres (2.1in) tall at its highest point, 62 millimetres (2.4in) long, and a maximum width of 37 millimetres (1.5in).[1]
Classification
In their phylogenetic analyses, Jacobs, Smith & Zouhri (2024) recovered Akharhynchus as a tropeognathine member of the Anhangueria, as the sister taxon to the contemporary Siroccopteryx, which is anatomically alike and similarly fragmentary. These two genera form a clade with the South American Tropeognathus.[3] In turn, the clade formed by these genera is sister to one comprising a polytomy of Australian tropeognathines typically referred to as the Mythungini.[4] The results of their analyses are displayed in the cladogram below:[1]
↑Hamed, Younes; Al-Gamal, Samir Anwar; Ali, Wassim; Nahid, Abederazzak; Dhia, Hamed Ben (March 1, 2014). "Palaeoenvironments of the Continental Intercalaire fossil from the Late Cretaceous (Barremian-Albian) in North Africa: a case study of southern Tunisia". Arabian Journal of Geosciences. 7 (3): 1165–1177. Bibcode:2014ArJG....7.1165H. doi:10.1007/s12517-012-0804-2. S2CID128755145.
↑Wilson, Jeffrey A.; Allain, Ronan (July 4, 2015). "Osteology of Rebbachisaurus garasbae Lavocat, 1954, a diplodocoid (Dinosauria, Sauropoda) from the early Late Cretaceous–aged Kem Kem beds of southeastern Morocco". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 35 (4) e1000701. Bibcode:2015JVPal..35E0701W. doi:10.1080/02724634.2014.1000701. S2CID129846042.