Friday, May 22, 2026

[Paleontology • 2026] Tylosaurus rex • A gigantic New Species of Tylosaurus (Squamata: Mosasauridae) from Texas: and A revised character list for phylogenetic analyses of Mosasauridae


Tylosaurus rex
Zietlow, Polcyn & Tykoski, 2026
 

Abstract
At least four subfamily-level clades of mosasaurs are broadly recognized (Mosasaurinae, Plioplatecarpinae, Tylosaurinae, Halisaurinae), each of which independently evolved flippers and other aquatic adaptations, including large body size. Tylosaurine mosasaurs are distinguished from other mosasaurs, in part, by edentulous extensions of both upper and lower jaws, proportionally long tails, and poorly ossified limbs, and they were the first mosasaur clade to achieve gigantic (>8 m) body size. Several tylosaurine species are known from Europe, Asia, New Zealand, Africa, and Antarctica, but they were most common in the Western Interior Seaway of North America. Here, we describe a new species, Tylosaurus rex, sp. nov., from the Campanian of Texas and analyze tylosaurine in-group systematics using a significantly updated phylogenetic character list. Our new species is distinguished by a unique suite of characters, including some associated with increased jaw and neck musculature, and others that may be convergent with other giant mosasaur species (e.g., Mosasaurus). Body length estimates for specimens referred to our new species are consistently larger (7.7–13.2 m) than those for the largest Niobrara species, T. proriger (3.9–9.5 m), although it is unclear whether this is a taxonomic signal or taphonomic bias. Several specimens that we refer to T. rex were previously referred to T. proriger in various collections databases, and some of the traits distinguishing them had been previously attributed to ontogenetic differences. However, we rule out this possibility as specimens of T. proriger and T. rex that do overlap in size can be differentiated by unique suites of diagnostic characters. The implicit association between body size and ontogeny, as well as the general absence of reliable locality and stratigraphic data associated with historical collections of North American mosasaurs, raises the possibility of the presence of other currently unrecognized species, previously dismissed as ontogenetic stages of other species.
 
Keywords: Tylosaurus rex, Tylosaurus, Texas, Classification, Mosasauridae, Phylogeny 



The holotype for the newly described Tylosaurus rex is a giant specimen displayed at the Perot Museum of Nature and Science in Dallas that was first discovered in 1979.
 Perot Museum of Nature and Science

Tylosaurus rex, sp. nov.

A reconstruction of Tylosaurus rex in the Cretaceous-era Western Interior Seaway of North America
artwork by Alderon Games - Path of Titans



Zietlow, Amelia R.; Polcyn, Michael J. and Tykoski, Ronald S. 2026. A gigantic New Species of Tylosaurus (Squamata, Mosasauridae) from Texas: and A revised character list for phylogenetic analyses of Mosasauridae. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History. 482; DOI: 10.1206/0003-0090.482.1.1 https://hdl.handle.net/2246/7549