Zuolong


Zuolong is an extinct genus of tetanuran theropod from the Late Jurassic period of China. The type and only species is Z. salleei. The generic name of Zuolong is in honor of General Zuo Zōngtáng with the Chinese word "long" which means dragon. The specific epithet "salleei" is in honor of Hilmar Sallee, who funded the expedition which led to the specimen's discovery.

Discovery

Zuolong was discovered in the upper part of the Wucaiwan member of the Shishugou Formation in Xinjiang, China. 40Ar/39Ar dating of volcanic feldspar at this locality places it at the span between the Callovian and Oxfordian boundary, and Zuolong was discovered in the upper part of this unit, which is interpreted as being Oxfordian in age. The specimen was discovered in 2001 by the Sino-American field expedition, but it was not described until 2010 when Jonah Choiniere, James Clark, Catherine Forester, and Xu Xing published a full analysis of the bones.
Choiniere and colleagues noted that, at the time of its description, Zuolong was one of the oldest coelurosaurs known to science, but that the implications of its discovery cannot be fully understood until more fossil material is discovered. The Middle Jurassic preserves very few coelurosaurs, and the ones which are known are almost all from China, with the exception of Proceratosaurus and Kileskus.
The holotype of Zuolong, given the designation IVPP V15912, consists of a partially complete skull and numerous post-cranial elements. The skull preserves a maxilla, a premaxilla, one of the quadrate bones, both quadratojugals, a squamosal bone, both ectopterygoids, a pterygoid bone, a lacrimal bone, a postorbital bone, a partial frontal and parietal, as well as three of the teeth from the lower jaw. Other elements of the skeleton which have been preserved include five cervical vertebrae, four dorsal vertebrae, five sacral vertebrae, eight caudal vertebrae, a humerus, the radius and ulna from the left arm, one of the hand claws, the left ilium, both pubic bones, both femora, a tibia, part of a fibula, three metatarsals from the right foot, three toes, and a single toe claw.

Description

Zuolong was not a large theropod. Choiniere and colleagues used two regression analyses based on the work of P. Christiansen and R.A. Fariña as well as François Therrien, and Donald M. Henderson to estimate the body mass of Zuolong and they calculated a range of between based on the length of the femur and the size of the skull. This would make it about half the estimated size of its contemporary, Guanlong. Later, Gregory S. Paul suggested that the holotype is a juvenile and estimates a total adult length of and a mass of. Other authors have suggested a larger adult size, giving a total length of meters and a mass of kilograms. The holotype is also considered by Thomas R. Holtz Jr. to almost certainly be from a juvenile theropod.
Choiniere and colleagues provide the following traits as autapomorphies for the skull: a slit-like depression on the surface of the quadrate bone, a square-shaped premaxillary body, a triangular tapering at the anterior of the maxilla, a relatively shallow antorbital fossa, frontal and jugal processes of the postorbital bone which contact at a right-angle, a postorbital bone with no anterior process, a ventral anterior process of the lacrimal bone. They also describe several autapomorphies of the post-cranial skeleton including: a centrum of the fifth sacral vertebra with an obliquely angled posterior articulation, a large fovea capitis, a large distal condyle of the third metatarsal, a short post-acetabular wing of the ilium, and a lack of a pubic tubercle, a straight ulna and radius, a ridge on the head of the tibia, a lack of paired lateral foramina on the vertebrae, a lack of lateral fossae on the vertebral centra, a straight humeral and femoral shaft, and a high and rounded ilium.

Skull

Several parts of the skull of the holotype are preserved completely, albeit with very poor preservation quality. This makes some aspects of the skull anatomy difficult to determine, but enough is known that the authors who described it noted several distinct features. There are very few primitive coelurosaurs known from complete remains, however the authors are able to draw numerous distinctions between Zuolong and other Late Jurassic small theropods such as Guanlong, Coelurus, and Tanycolagreus. The skull is overall triangular-shaped, with a significant tapering towards the end of the snout. It has very large orbits which face laterally and a pronounced anterior process of the lacrimal, which gives the appearance of a small crest above the eyes, a trait very common among theropods.
The preserved alveoli of the tooth positions are relatively well-preserved, which led Choiniere and colleagues to estimate that in life, Zuolong likely had a total of four premaxillary and twelve maxillary teeth. Of the teeth which are preserved, one is likely a premaxillary tooth, because it is said to be much smaller than the other preserved teeth. It is d-shaped in cross-section, which is the condition seen in tyrannosauroids, although they are not quite as convex as they are in those taxa. The other teeth which are preserved were badly damaged by the fossilization process, but they do appear to have some serrations. In most other respects, they resemble the teeth of most other theropods; they are long and recurved with cylindrical roots. This is emblematic of a common trend in the skull anatomy of Zuolong which the authors note. It shares numerous skull characteristics with derived coelurosaurs, but also with more basally-branching theropods like carcharodontosaurs and megalosauroids.

Post-Cranial Skeleton

Twenty-two vertebrae are preserved, coming from all four vertebral segments. Choiniere and colleagues noted multiple features of the vertebrae of Zuolong which were similar to other theropods from a wide range of clades. For example, the mid-cervical vertebrae possess a posteriorly-projecting lip on the ventral side, which is a condition seen in Monolophosaurus, Allosaurus, and numerous maniraptorans. The cervical vertebrae themselves are also highly elongate, and are more than twice as long as they are tall. However, the authors note that this is actually much shorter than the cervical vertebrae in other primitive coelurosaurs, such as Guanlong and Coelurus, which are more than three times as long as they are tall. The dorsal vertebrae are not as well-preserved as the cervicals, but they are complete enough to determine that they have twin pleurocoels and lack both fossae and foramina on their lateral surfaces. The sacrum is similarly incomplete and was damaged during fossilization, but the authors hypothesized that Zuolong likely had five sacral vertebrae, like most other coelurosaurs. The caudal vertebrae, like the dorsals, lack both fossae and formania on their lateral surface, and they also preserve sharply inclined neural spines, though these are not as pronounced as they are in allosauroids.
The left humerus and radius are both preserved, and the radius is about 88% the length of the humerus, which is a ratio that is conserved across a wide variety of theropods. The manual claws which are preserved are strongly curved and have lateral grooves down their length.
The hip bones display a supraacetabular crest which extends from the posterior end of the acetabulum. This is a common trait in primitive theropods like Cryolophosaurus, but which disappears in derived maniraptorans. The femur is also very different than most coelurosaurs because the head of the femur is oriented about 15 degrees toward the anterior of the animal, unlike in other coelurosaurs, where there it only extends medially from the femur at a 90-degree angle. One of the autapomorphies for Zuolong, the enlarged fovea capitis, is known to be a pathological condition in male turkeys, so the authors say they cannot rule this out as a possibility, although they think it is relatively unlikely and cannot be proven until a second specimen is found.
The other leg bones display a patchwork of characteristics seen in other theropods. The fourth trochanter is much higher up on the femur than it is in more basal theropods, but still not as high as in other, more derived, coelurosaurs. Likewise, the medial side of the distal end of the femur is smooth and does not possess the rugosities seen in that area in tyrannosauroids. The tibia is not complete, so it is not possible to know if Zuolong had a tibia which exceeded the femur in length, which is more common in derived coelurosaurs and is commonly viewed as a cursorial adaptation. The metetarsals are generally similar to other basal coelurosaurs such as Coelurus and Tanycolagreus, however they do have a unique feature in this part of the body which is a flange on the front-medial edge of the distal condyle of the third metatarsal, which is not seen in similar taxa.

Classification

The classification of Zuolong has been uncertain and controversial since its description. Almost every analysis including it in its matrix has recovered this species in a different position. Different hypotheses of its classification can be seen below.

As a Basal Coelurosaur

The most common hypothesis of the taxonomy of Zuolong is that it is a basal member of coelurosauria.
In their description of Zuolong in 2010, Choiniere and colleagues included a wide variety of taxa in their phylogenetic analysis. Zuolong exhibits several symplesiomorphies of coelurosaurs and other theropod groups. The species is also from a part of the Mesozoic where several theropod groups are known to have originated, so the affinities of Zuolong needed to be tested against a broad range of taxa, including coelophysoids and ceratosaurs in addition to avetheropods. They also included numerous coelurosaurs of uncertain classification in an attempt to use their analysis to resolve the phylogeny hypotheses at the base of coelurosauria. These included Bagaraatan, Tugulusaurus, Tanycolagreus, and Aniksosaurus, although a few of these taxa were eventually excluded from the final analysis.
The resulting analysis recovered Zuolong within a monophyletic coelurosauria, but did not resolve any more specific relationships between basal coelurosaurs outside of well-established groups like maniraptora and tyrannosauroidea. Their placement of Zuolong as a coelurosaur was based on the following synapomorphies: a maxillary fenestra behind the antorbital fossa, a dorsal ridge of the antorbital fossa formed by the nasal and lacrimal bones, d-shaped premaxillary teeth, maxillary teeth with non-uniform serrations, cervical vertebrae with multiple pleurocoels, a femur shorter than the tibia, a cnemial crest level with the posterior proximal condyle of the tibia, a groove on the ascending process of the astragalus, and a lack of a horizontal groove on the astragalar condyles. Another novel result of this phylogeny included a recovery of Proceratosaurus at the base of coelurosauria outside of tyrannosauroidea. A reduced consensus tree compiled from 421 of the most parsimonious trees in their analysis is shown below.
In 2020, a group of several authors led by the Brazilian paleontologist Juliana Manso Sayão described a new genus of coelurosaur from the Romualdo Formation, Aratasaurus. They conducted a phylogenetic analysis using the data set presented in a 2012 paper about the anatomy and relationships of Nqwebasaurus, another enigmatic early coelurosaur, some supplementary data about Santanaraptor, and added the recently described Bicentenaria to the dataset.
In the resulting analysis the conducted, they recovered this new taxon as the sister-species of Zuolong. This was based on the synapomorphy that both animals have a ginglymoidal joint at the distal end of the third metatarsal. Both taxa were recovered as basal coelurosaurs, similar to Choiniere and colleagues, based on the following synapomorphies: an antorbital fossa with a dorsal border in lateral view, a medial opening on the ectopterygoid bones of the palate, a d-shaped cross-section of the premaxillary teeth, a rounded surface on the bottom of the caudal vertebrae, a shelf-like fossa on the ilium, and a lack of an anterior process on the pubic boot.
Other novel results of this analysis included finding a paraphyletic proceratosauridae and recovering Bicentenaria as a relatively derived stem-maniraptoran and the sister taxon of Ornitholestes. A consensus tree compiled from the 1,056 most parsimonious trees is shown below.
A recent phylogeny including Zuolong was contained in the paper which described the new taxon Maip, a large megaraptoran from the Late Cretaceous by Rolando and colleagues in 2022. They performed two analyses, one which included fragmentary taxa, and one which did not. Although the discussion of their results focused most heavily on its implications for megaraptoran taxonomy, both of their analyses resolved the same relationships for Zuolong and other basal coelurosaurs. The results of their analysis, compiled from a consensus of the 2,560 most parsimonious trees is shown below.
A similar result was recovered by Andrea Cau in his study of theropod phylogeny and ontogeny in 2024.