Pteranodon Argentinus

Pteranodon Argentinus was a species of pterosaur that lived in what is now Argentina and Brazil during the Early Cretaceous and Late Eocene from 105 million years ago to 34 million years ago, making it the longest-lasting species of Pteranodon and the last ever pterosaur in existence. They were most likely fish-eaters as their bones suggests, but as new evidence confirms, they also likely fed on carrion, insects (as youngsters), eggs (as one fossil shows), and small mammals. They were about the size of Pteranodon Longiceps in wingspan and length from the tip of the beak to the tip of the tail, but probably weighed a little less as their bones suggests. They were the only known pterosaur species to make it pass the Mesozoic and survived the K-T extinction event, probably due to parental care that almost no other pterosaur possessed. However, they didn't make it pass the Eocene for some reason, probably due to competition for food from the now-extinct bony-toothed birds such as Pelagornis.