#Hupehsuchus
Hupehsuchus - een fascinerende vishagedis (of in elk geval een verwant ervan) die op een manier vergelijkbaar met baleinwalvissen voedsel uit het water filterde. Deze werd maar een meter groot. www.youtube.com/watch?v=iM-Q...
The First Filter-Feeding Reptile
YouTube video by Raptor Chatter
www.youtube.com
September 6, 2025 at 6:41 AM
Out on a family beach trip, Hilda gets taken a photo of her, but a Hupehsuchus too decided to get in frame

#drawing #HildaTheSeries #hildafanart #hildahilda #johannahilda #bellkeeperhilda #Hupehsuchus
July 17, 2025 at 3:54 AM
As many suspected, Hupehsuchus probably wasn't a filter feeder after all, at least not in the way baleen whales are

peerj.com/articles/196...
Was Hupehsuchus a baleen whale-style filter feeder in the Early Triassic? A re-examination of the evidence
One of the recurring paleobiological questions over the last three decades has been whether there were any filter feeding tetrapods before whales evolved. Recently, a study proposed that a small marin...
peerj.com
July 6, 2025 at 5:39 PM
Was Hupehsuchus a baleen whale-style filter feeder in the Early Triassic? A re-examination of the evidence @peerj.bsky.social
Was Hupehsuchus a baleen whale-style filter feeder in the Early Triassic? A re-examination of the evidence
One of the recurring paleobiological questions over the last three decades has been whether there were any filter feeding tetrapods before whales evolved. Recently, a study proposed that a small marine reptile from the Early Triassic, Hupehsuchus nanchangensis, filter-fed in a mode similar to living right and bowhead whales (Balaenidae). The case for filter feeding was largely based on perceived similarities in dorsal-view cranial morphology between Hupehsuchus and Balaenidae, analyzed through geometric morphometrics of 2D landmarks. Here, we show that this similarity was an artifact of multiple errors, including the use of a dataset of extant cetaceans that does not match the morphology of respective species. Notably, 15 of the cetacean species examined were represented by narrow skulls reminiscent of Hupehsuchus­; without these unrealistic data points, Hupehsuchus has no morphospace overlap with any cetaceans, invalidating the proposed inference for Triassic filter-feeding. We collected a new set of landmarks using the published definitions to see how the result changes when using more accurate data along the original authors’ intention. We determined that odontocetes and mysticetes do not overlap in morphospace with Hupehsuchus, which plots outside any living cetacean species. We conclude that there is insufficient evidence to suggest that Hupehsuchus was a filter feeder, in concordance with: energetic studies suggesting balaenid-style feeding would be unsustainable at the small body sizes of Hupehsuchus; the lack of an intraoral space for the baleen; and the long neck and comparatively small head that are unsuitable for continuous ram feeding to filter prey-laden volumes of water. This re-examination of Hupehsuchus highlights the challenges for inferring filter-feeding in other extinct tetrapods.
dlvr.it
July 5, 2025 at 1:10 AM
alas our dear sweet hupehsuchus was only a metre long
February 28, 2025 at 5:54 PM
hupehsuchus is the namesake of the clade hupehsuchia, a group of marine reptiles with a complex taxonomic history, recently considered relatives of ichthyosaurs in the 2015 paper that named eretmorhipis pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC...
A New Specimen of Carroll’s Mystery Hupehsuchian from the Lower Triassic of China
A new specimen of an enigmatic hupehsuchian genus is reported. The genus was first recognized by Robert L. Carroll and Zhi-ming Dong in 1991, who refrained from naming it because of the poor quality o...
pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
February 28, 2025 at 3:50 PM
happy #fossilfriday! this is hupehsuchus, a small marine reptile from early triassic china. hupehsuchus was likely a filter feeder with an ecological niche analogous to modern baleen whales
(art by mark witton)
February 28, 2025 at 3:47 PM
November 16, 2024 at 6:07 PM
Do you ever just...

Think about Hupehsuchus?
October 6, 2023 at 6:06 AM
Sketches from last night´s #paleostream Hupehsuchus, Bobosaurus, Eucoelophysis and Carolowilhelmina
August 19, 2023 at 10:25 AM
today's #Paleostream sketches!!!

today we drew Hupehsuchus, Bobosaurus, Eucoelophysis, and Carolowilhelmina

#SciArt
August 19, 2023 at 2:01 AM
The authors show in a few different ways that Hupehsuchus was almost certainly a filter feeder and that baleen-like structures were almost certainly present in the upper jaw. It would have swam forward while engulfing water or sediment and filtered out the zooplankton--its only food source.
August 10, 2023 at 4:59 AM
Well, a few Hupehsuchus skulls may give an answer. Motani et al. (2015) reported an upside-down skull that showed features indicative of baleen, including grooves on the jaw margin resembling the same grooves in rorqual whales.

Additionally, the thin lower jaw was adapted for bending/bowing.
August 10, 2023 at 4:51 AM
Hey ya'll. Want to know about an awesome new paleo paper? Great! It's about an Early Triassic marine reptile called Hupehsuchus.

I suspect that many of you don't know what Hupehsuchus is. Let's introduce the weird little dude!

Hupehsuchus nanchangensis is a Chinese animal named in 1972.
August 10, 2023 at 4:25 AM
"The hupehsuchians were a unique group in China, close relatives of the ichthyosaurs, and known for 50 years, but their mode of life was not fully understood." - Zichen Fang

https://phys.org/news/2023-08-whale-filter-feeding-prehistoric-marine-reptile.html
August 8, 2023 at 10:27 PM
"The reptile in question, Hupehsuchus nanchangensis, arrived on the scene a few million years after the Grea…" occurred in: https://www.nytimes.com/2023/08/07/science/filter-feeding-reptile-whale.html
August 8, 2023 at 12:30 AM