Ancient human-size sea lizard rewrites history of early armored marine reptiles

The newly discovered species, Prosaurosphargis yingzishanensis, grew to around 5 feet long and was covered in bony scales called osteoderms.

An extinct, 250 million-year-old marine reptile that was covered in bony armor and swam in the shallow waters of what is now South China could rewrite the family tree of armored marine reptiles and hint at why they first emerged, a new study shows.

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An artist’s interpretation of what the newfound species, Prosaurosphargis yingzishanensis, may have looked like. Wolniewicz et al. eLife / Fair Use

The newfound species, named Prosaurosphargis yingzishanensis, was identified from a partial skeleton first discovered in 2019 at Yingzishan quarry in China’s Hubei Province.

P. yingzishanensis belongs to the family Saurosphargidae, a group of armored marine reptiles with broadened dorsal ribs that made them appear much more stocky than other marine reptiles. (Sauorsphargidae is a combination of the Greek words for lizard, “sauros,” and leatherback turtle, “sphargis”).

P. yingzishanensis likely grew to around 5 feet (1.5 meters) long and was covered in osteoderms – bony scales and plates found in many living reptiles, armored dinosaurs, and some mouse tails. It was likely “one of the bigger marine reptiles” living in its ecosystem at the time, according to the lead author of the study Andrzej Wolniewicz, a paleobiologist at Hefei University of Technology in China and the Polish Academy of Sciences.

Until now, the oldest saurosphargids date back to around 245 million years ago during the mid-Triassic period. Scientists don’t know whether P. yingzishanensis was a direct ancestor to these later saurosphargids or a separate lineage, Wolniewicz said. But the overall body plan of the newly described species strongly hints that the entire group may have been previously misclassified, he added.

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Some of the bones from the partial skeleton of P. yingzishanensis. Wolniewicz et al. eLife / Fair Use

Saurosphargids have long been considered a sister family of the sauropterygians, a more diverse group of extinct marine reptiles including armored turtle-like creatures called placodonts and long-necked predators such as plesiosaurs.

However, the researchers noted a large number of similarities between P. yingzishanensis and some of the plesiosaur-like sauropterygians, which suggests the two groups may be more closely related than previously thought, Wolniewicz said. As a result, the study authors have proposed that the saurosphargids should be reclassified as a sub-group of sauropterygians.

The researchers also believe that sauropterygians and other groups of marine reptiles, such as ichthyosauromorphs, which include ichthyosaurs and thalattosaurs, may be more closely related to the clade Archelosauria – a group that includes living and extinct turtles and archosaurs, which include crocodilians and birds – than previously thought.

The wide variety of body armor across all these groups, excluding birds, also suggests that their bony plating was key to living in shallow water habitats, Wolniewicz said. As well as providing protection from predators, this heavy plating may have enabled marine reptiles to overcome issues with buoyancy by weighing them down and forage around the seafloor, where a majority of prey would be found, he added.

The researchers hope the region where the P. yingzishanensis fossil was discovered will reveal more ancient species that could bridge the gap between the ancient reptile groups and fill in further missing pieces in their evolutionary history.


The study was originally published in the journal Evolutionary Biology on August 8, 2023.