Falcatakely (left) or Janavis (right)?
Voting ended onMar 9, 2023
Artwork by @otussketching, written by @zygodactylus
Name Meaning: Forster’s Small Scythe Beak
Time: 70 to 66 million years ago (Maastrichtian stage of the Late Cretaceous)
Location: Maevarano Formation, Mahajanga Province, Madagascar
We like to joke that the different types of protobirds in the Mesozoic were just like modern birds with teeth, and that’s obviously an oversimplification, but sometimes it’s just true. This is one of those times. Falcatakely was an Enantironithine - an Opposite bird - very distinct from living birds, and yet, it convergently evolved a toucan beak, essentially rendering it a toothed toucan! Don’t get your hopes up, though - the teeth were few in number, concentrated in the front of the beak. But, still, that’s not going to stop me from calling this an Opposite Toucan. Unfortunately, only the skull is known, so it is uncertain how large the rest of the body was - the beak itself was 9 centimeters in length. Falcatakely lived in the seasonally arid Maevarano Formation, which transitioned between a swampy floodplain and a semidesert depending on the season. Here there were a LOT of weird animals, not just Falcatakely - this is the home of the herbivorous croc Simosuchus, the toothy dinosaur Masiakasaurus, giant stem-mammals like Adalatherium, the giant frog Beelzebufo, the weird protobird Rahonavis, and more normal things like Majungasaurus and Rapetosaurus. Honestly, we should stop being surprised at the strange things islands manage to produce, but I’m not quite ready to give up that shocked feeling yet.
Artwork by @otussketching, written by @zygodactylus
Name Meaning: Janus’ final toothed bird
Time: 66.8 million years ago (Maastrichtian stage of the Late Cretaceous)
Location: Maastricht Formation, Eben-Emael, Belgium
Janavis was another inhabitant of the Maastricht Formation, living alongside the modern bird Asteriornis, which it would have appeared very similar to - except Janavis was a protobird, specifically a cousin of Ichthyornis, featuring teeth (like other protobirds) and serving as an interesting juxtaposition living alongside Asteriornis - a strange play of the past and the future, living alongside one another, just before the asteroid hit. Janavis is known from fossils embedded in hard rock that were primarily examined via CT scan, which revealed vertebrae and parts of the limb bones, where only the skull and some fragments had been known previously from the exposed parts of the fossil. Fairly large, with a wingspan of five feet, it was much bigger (nearly twice) than its cousin Ichthyornis. It had greatly pneumatisied vertebrae, and a very kinetic skull allowing for a wide variety of movement in the jaws. This is interesting, as the earliest derived modern birds - the Paleognathes - all have non-kinetic skulls like most dinosaurs, indicating that it is possible that group had a trait reversal, rather than kinetic skulls only first evolving in Neognathes. It mainly fed on seafood along the coast, like its relatives, and spent its time in the tropical forests along the coast. Many invertebrates, ammonites, corals, echinoderms, sharks, mosasurs, turtles, elasmosaurs, and marsupials shared its environment, as well as dinosaurs such as Asteriornis, Orthomerus, and as-yet unnamed taxa.