Shri (named after Palden Lhamo, a Buddhist deity) is an extinct genus of small dromaeosaurid dinosaurs that lived in what is now Mongolia during the Late Cretaceous. The genus contains two species; the first, Shri devi, was described in 2021 by Alan H. Turner and colleagues based on a partial postcranial skeleton from the Barun Goyot Formation. A second specimen, including a partial skull and hindlimb, was later referred to this species. The second species, Shri rapax, was described in 2025 by Léa Moutrille and colleagues based on a nearly complete skeleton including a skull (though the skull has subsequently been lost) from the Djadokhta Formation.
In 2023, Polish paleontologist Łukasz Czepiński referred a new specimen to the genus, ZPAL MgD-I/97, represented by a partial skull and left hindlimb. It was recovered from the Khulsan locality of the Barun Goyot Formation in 1970 during the Polish-Mongolian Paleontological Expeditions and initially assigned to Velociraptor. Further examinations by Czepiński concluded it to represent an additional specimen of Shri based on pes (foot) morphology.
In 2025, French researcher Léa Moutrille and colleagues described Shri rapax as a second species in the genus based on an articulated, nearly complete skeleton likely collected from the Djadokhta Formation (Ukhaa Tolgod locality). The specimen was illegally poached at some time prior to 2010 and subsequently held in private Japanese and English collections. Eldonia, a French company, later obtained it, and in 2016, the skull and first four articulated cervical (neck) vertebrae were taken to be scanned at the Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences. As of the description of the specimen in 2025, the whereabouts of this material is unknown and presumed lost. Later negotiations allowed the specimen to be repatriated and returned to the Institute of Paleontology of the Mongolian Academy of Sciences. The remainder of the specimen, now catalogued as MPC-D 102/117, comprises most of the vertebral column (neck, back, sacrum, and tail) with associated ribs, both , a full set of , the left , both , the , the full right forelimb and manus, a complete pelvis (including right and left parts), and part of both . The specific name, rapax, is derived from a Latin word meaning "rapacious", referencing the enlarged, sickle-shaped claw on the first digit of the hand.
In their 2025 description of Shri rapax, Moutrille et al. similarly recovered Shri as the sister taxon to Velociraptor mongoliensis within the Velociraptorinae. These results were obtained using the comprehensive theropod-focused phylogenetic matrix of Andrea Cau (2024), who contributed to the description of S. rapax. A cladogram based on these results is displayed below:
Description
Classification
Paleobiology
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