Dinopedia
EvZuseOWgAQ7blr

The theropods illustration

Tamarro (named after a mythological creature in local culture) is an extinct genus of troodontid theropod from the Late Cretaceous Talarn Formation; Tremp Group, of Spain. The genus contains a single species, Tamarro insperatus, known from a partial metatarsal described in 2021. [1]

Life reconstruction of Tamarro insperatus

Discovery and naming[]

The holotype of Tamarro, categorized as MCD-7073, was found in 2003 at the Sant Romà d'Abella site, belonging to the Talarn Formation of the Tremp Group. In 2021, Sellés et al. described it as a new genus and species, Tamarro insperatus; the generic name is that of a small creature in the folklore of Pallars, Spain, while the specific name means "unexpected", referring to the unexpected discovery of the fossil. [2]

Description[]

Analysis of the holotype suggests it was a subadult; its large size suggests it grew quickly early in its life, similiar to other theropod subadults growth rates. Tamarro lived on the Ibero-Armorican Island, and it's discovery increases knowledge about the diversity of small theropods on the Cretaceous European archipelago. It would have lived at the same time as dwarf sauropods and lambeosaurine hadrosaurs. [3]

Classification[]

Sellés et al. placed Tamarro in the Jinfengopteryginae, making it the first member of the subfamily from Europe. They also suggested that its ancestors migrated from Asia to Europe sometime between the Cenomanian and the Maastrichtian.

Paleobiology[]

Analysis of the holotype suggests it was a subadult; its large size suggests it grew quickly early in its life.

Paleoecology[]

Tamarro lived on the Ibero-Armorican Island, and its discovery increases knowledge about the diversity of small theropods on the Cretaceous European archipelago. It would have lived at the same time as dwarf sauropods and lambeosaurine hadrosaurs.

References[]