Although my primary work is on the behaviour and ecology of extinct animals, I have also been a lead or co-author on a number of scientific publications naming a number of dinosaurs and other taxa.

Dinosaurs:

Zhuchengtyrannus magnus – A Tyrannosaurus-sized carnivore from China.

Limusaurus inextricabilis – The first herbivorous form known from a carnivorous group.

Anchiornis huxleyi – An especially bird-like feathered dinosaur close to the origin of birds.

Linhenykus monodactylus – A small bird-like dinosaur with just one finger on each hand.

Wulatelong gobiensis – An oviraptorosaur from the Gobi desert.

Zhanghenglong yangchengensis – A late surviving hadrosauroid from central China.

Shaochilong maortuensis – The first carcharodontosaur identified from Asia.

Linheraptor exquisitus – A carnivorous dinosaur and very close relative of Velociraptor.

Xixianykus zhangi – One of the earliest alvarezsaurid dinosaurs.

Pterosaurs:

Bellubrunnus rothgaengeri – A tiny pterosaur from Germany with unusual, forward-directed wingtips.

Cryodrakon boreas – A giant azhdarchid from Canada known from a well-preserved partial skeleton.

Dendrorhynchoides mutoudengensis – One of only five known species of anuroganthid pterosaur.

Luchibang xingzhe – The most complete istiodactylid ever found and one with unusually long legs and large feet.

Others:

Fodonyx spenceri – A rhynchosaurian reptile from the south coast of England.

Bentonyx sidensis – A rhynchosaur named after my PhD supervisor.