Keichousaurus Hui
Keichousaurus was highly adapted to the aquatic environment. Individuals of this genus ranged from 15-30cm in length, and had both long necks and long tails, with elongated, five-toed feet. The pointed head and sharp teeth in this genus also indicate that they were fish-eaters. Some recovered specimens feature an especially developed ulna suggesting they may have spent some time on land or in marshes. in addition fossil evidence shows that they had a mobile pelvis to give birth to live young rather than laying eggs. The locomotion of the Keichousaurus probably resembled the ''underwater flight'' that plesiosaurs employed. The flattened forelimbs would likely have acted as stabilizers and control surfaces, such as is seen in extant sea turtles. The intermediate nature of the limb morphology implies that there was also, to some extent, the kind of 'crawling through the water' seen in small freshwater turtles.







