Biology:Fylax

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Fylax (meaning "keeper") is a genus of hadrosauroid ornithopod from the Late Cretaceous Figuerola Formation of Spain. The genus contains a single species, Fylax thyrakolasus, known from a nearly complete left dentary.

Discovery and naming

Reconstructed skeleton based on Tethyshadros, with the preserved dentary in white

The holotype of Fylax, IPS-36338, a left dentary, was discovered in the early 1990s. It was found in the Figuerola Formation in Lleida province, northeastern Spain. It was initially described in 1999.[1][2]

In 2021, Albert Prieto-Márquez and Miguel Ángel Carrera Farias described the dentary as belonging to a new genus of hadrosauroid dinosaur. The generic name, Fylax, comes from the modern Greek, fýlax (keeper), and the specific name, thyrakolasus, comes from the Greek thýra (gate) and kólasi (hell), thus creating the combination "keeper of the gates of hell” in reference to the proximity of this taxon to the Cretaceous-Paleogene mass extinction event.[2]

Classification

Prieto-Márquez and Carrera Farias (2021) recovered Fylax as the sister taxon to Tethyshadros in a derived position in the Hadrosauromorpha, making it one of the latest surviving non-hadrosaurid hadrosauromorphs. Their cladogram is shown below:

Hadrosauromorpha

Jeyawati

Eolambia

Protohadros

Tanius

Bactrosaurus

Gilmoreosaurus

Lophorhothon

Penelopognathus

Telmatosaurus

Claosaurus

Fylax

Tethyshadros

Plesiohadros

Eotrachodon

Hadrosauridae

In their 2026 description of Kryptohadros, Magyar and colleagues included Fylax in an updated version of the phylogenetic matrix of Longrich et al. (2024)[3] and the similar but less extensive matrix of Dai et al. (2025).[4] Both datasets failed to recover a close relationship between Fylax and Tethyshadros, as initially proposed in 2021. Instead, Tethyhadros was recovered as the sister taxon of Kryptohadros in a clade also containing Telmatosaurus, deemed the Telmatosauridae. Using the latter matrix, Fylax was placed in a more derived position, as an early-diverging member of the Hadrosauridae. The majority rule tree using the dataset of Longrich et al. (2024) placed Fylax in a more basal position, as the sister taxon to the Chinese Bactrosaurus. These results are displayed in the cladogram below:[5]

Hadrosauromorpha

Eolambia caroljonesa

Protohadros byrdi

Yunganglong datongensis

Levnesovia transoxiana

Tanius sinensis

Nanyangosaurus zhugeii

Bactrosaurus johnsoni

Fylax thyrakolasus

Gilmoreosaurus mongoliensis

Shuangmiaosaurus gilmorei

Nanningosaurus dashiensis

Claosaurus agilis

Telmatosauridae

Telmatosaurus transsylvanicus

Kryptohadros kallaiae

Tethyshadros insularis

Plesiohadros djadokhtaensis

Gobihadros mongoliensis

Penelopognathus weishampeli

Eotrachodon orientalis

Zhanghenglong yangchengensis

Huehuecanauhtlus tiquichensis

Jeyawati rugoculus

Hadrosauridae

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References

  1. Casanovas, M.L., Pereda Suberbiola, X.P., Santafé, J.V., and Weishampel, D.B. 1999. "A primitive euhadrosaurian dinosaur from the uppermost Cretaceous of the Ager syncline (southern Pyrenees, Catalonia)". Geologie en Mijnbouw 78: 345–356
  2. 2.0 2.1 Prieto-Márquez, Albert; Carrera Farias, Miguel (2021). "A new late-surviving early diverging Ibero-Armorican duck-billed dinosaur and the role of the Late Cretaceous European Archipelago in hadrosauroid biogeography". Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 66. doi:10.4202/app.00821.2020. https://ddd.uab.cat/pub/artpub/2021/242994/app008212020.pdf. 
  3. Longrich, N. R.; Pereda-Suberbiola, X.; Bardet, N.; Jalil, N.-E. (2024). "A new small duckbilled dinosaur (Hadrosauridae: Lambeosaurinae) from Morocco and dinosaur diversity in the late Maastrichtian of North Africa". Scientific Reports 14 (1): 3665. doi:10.1038/s41598-024-53447-9. PMID 38351204. Bibcode2024NatSR..14.3665L. 
  4. Dai, Hui; Ma, Qingyu; Xiong, Can; Lin, Yu; Zeng, Hui; Tan, Chao; Wang, Jun; Zhang, Yuguang et al. (February 2025). "A new late-diverging non-hadrosaurid hadrosauroid (Dinosauria: Ornithopoda) from southwest China: support for interchange of dinosaur faunas across East Asia during the Late Cretaceous". Cretaceous Research 166 (in press). doi:10.1016/j.cretres.2024.105995. ISSN 0195-6671. Bibcode2025CrRes.16605995D. https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S019566712400168X. 
  5. Magyar, J.; Ősi, A.; Csiki-Sava, Z.; Budai, S.; Botfalvai, G. (2026). "New early Maastrichtian 'duck-billed' dinosaur from Hațeg Basin (Densuș-Ciula Formation, Romania) documents an endemic clade of non-hadrosaurid hadrosauroids in the south-eastern Late Cretaceous European Archipelago". Journal of Systematic Palaeontology 24 (1). doi:10.1080/14772019.2025.2607800. https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14772019.2025.2607800. 

Wikidata ☰ Q107088395 entry