Oviraptorosaurs have shortened
rostrums, massive, beaklike
mandibles, and long
parietal bones. With the exception of the 8-meter long
Gigantoraptor, they are generally medium-sized and rarely exceeded 2 meters in length. The most primitive members have four pairs of teeth in the
premaxillae, such as in
Caudipteryx and in
Incisivosaurus they are enlarged and form bizarrely prominent bucktoothed incisors. The more advanced members have no teeth in the jaws.
Pneumatization is extensive in the skulls and
vertebrae of the more advanced members. Oviraptorosaurs have thick, U-shaped
furculae and a large
sternal plates that are wider (together) than they are long, unlike in birds and
dromaeosaurs. The arms are around half the length of the legs and over half the length of the
presacral vertebral column. The hands are long, and tridactyl, with a reduced third finger in
Caudipteryx and
Ajancingenia. There are between 5 and 8 sacral vertebrae. The
pubis is vertical or subvertical, with a concave anterior edge. The
tibia is 15%-25% longer than the femur. The tail is short, with the number of vertebrae reduced to 24 or so, and
proximally very thick, with broad
transverse processes. '' skeleton cast in the
Rocky Mountain Dinosaur Resource Center in Woodland Park, Colorado Oviraptorosaurs are different from most other
maniraptorans in the form of their skulls. They have shortened snouts, beak-like jaws with few or no teeth, and a large opening in the lower jaw bone. Some have bony crests atop the skull. The most primitive members have a few teeth in the front of the mouth; in
Incisivosaurus, they are enlarged and form bizarrely prominent "bucktoothed" incisors. The arms and hands are generally long (though very reduced in some advanced species) and the shoulder girdle is large and massive, with flexed
coracoid bones and prominent attachments for strong arm muscles. Their tails are very short compared to other maniraptorans. In
Nomingia and
Similicaudipteryx, the tail ends in four fused vertebrae which Osmólska, He, and others have referred to as a "
pygostyle", but which Witmer found was anatomically different and evolved separately from the pygostyle of birds (a bone which serves as the attachment point for a fan of tail feathers). Similarly, quill knobs (anchor points for wing feathers on the ulna) have been reported in the oviraptorosaur species
Avimimus portentosus. Additionally, a number of oviraptorid specimens have famously been discovered in a nesting position similar to that of modern birds. The arms of these specimens are positioned in such a way that they could perfectly cover their eggs if they had small wings and a substantial covering of feathers. Notably, a study on flight feathers has concluded that
Caudipteryx was secondarily flightless, implying an ancestral volant ancestor for oviraptorosaurs. ==Paleobiology==