64 research outputs found

    The last erythrosuchid-a revision of Chalishevia cothurnata from the late Middle Triassic of European Russia

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    Erythrosuchidae is a clade of early archosauriform reptiles that were large-bodied, hypercarnivorous, possibly apex predators in late Early and Middle Triassic ecosystems following the Permo-Triassic mass extinction. Chalishevia cothurnata from the late Middle Triassic (Ladinian) of Russia, is the stratigraphically youngest known erythrosuchid species, but the holotype and referred material of this taxon has received little study. Here, we provide the first detailed anatomical description of C. cothurnata, including comparisons to other erythrosuchids. Although known from relatively fragmentary material, the anatomy of C. cothurnata is distinctive, including an autapomorphic strongly slanted ventral border of the antorbital fossa. The presence of a large accessory opening (the “accessory antorbital fenestra”) in the skull between the premaxilla, nasal and maxilla, together with the inferred presence of a narrow postnarial process of the premaxilla that articulated with a slot on the nasal, provides strong evidence for a sister taxon relationship between C. cothurnata and the erythrosuchid Shansisuchus shansisuchus from the early Middle Triassic (Anisian) of China. The inferred basal skull length of C. cothurnata was approximately 80 cm, making it one of the largest erythrosuchids known.Fil: Butler, Richard. University of Birmingham; Reino UnidoFil: Sennikov, Andrey. Kazan Federal University. Institute of Geology and Petroleum Technologies; RusiaFil: Ezcurra, Martin Daniel. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Oficina de Coordinación Administrativa Parque Centenario. Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturales "Bernardino Rivadavia"; ArgentinaFil: Gower, David. Natural History Museum; Reino Unid

    Data from: The monophyly of Euparkeriidae (Reptilia: Archosauriformes) and the origins of Archosauria: a revision of Dorosuchus neoetus from the Mid-Triassic of Russia

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    Euparkeria capensis is resolved as the sister taxon to crown Archosauria in many cladistic phylogenies and provides a key outgroup which may approximate the ancestral archosaur morphology. Several other taxa have been referred to the family Euparkeriidae, but the monophyly of this taxon remains doubtful and largely untested. In order to test this monophyly, the archosauriform and putative euparkeriid Dorosuchus neoetus from the Mid-Triassic of Russia is reexamined in light of recent work on the evolution of stem archosaurs. Dorosuchus neoetus is found to possess a number of morphological features that place it close to Archosauria, including a sigmoidal femur with a clear attachment region for the m. caudifemoralis musculature, but no unambiguous archosaurian apomorphies. Dorosuchus neoetus is included for the first time in a numerical cladistic analysis, and is recovered as the sole sister taxon to Archosauria+Phytosauria. A monophyletic Euparkeriidae including D. neoetus and E. capensis is slightly less parsimonious. In addition, a mandible and pterygoid that were previously referred to D. neoetus subsequent to the original description of the species are also included separately within the phylogenetic analysis, and are recovered within crown Archosauria, possibly raising questions as to their correct taxonomic referral. However, this phylogenetic placement is based primarily on the absence of palatal teeth, but the presence or absence of palatal teeth exhibits considerable homoplasy within Archosauriformes. Based on other aspects of their morphology, we do not reject the referral of these elements to D. neoetus

    The osteology of the holotype of the early erythrosuchid Garjainia prima (Diapsida: Archosauromorpha) from the upper Lower Triassic of European Russia

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    Erythrosuchids are Early–Middle Triassic bulky, quadrupedal archosauromorphs with proportionally large heads, and they were among the first archosauromorphs to occupy the role of terrestrial hypercarnivores. Recent work has expanded anatomical and phylogenetic knowledge of erythrosuchids, but a thorough understanding is still lacking, and Erythrosuchus africanus is the only species for which a thorough anatomical description of most of the skeleton has been published. Garjainia prima, from the upper Olenekian of Russia, represents one of the oldest known erythrosuchids and includes the best-preserved skull of an Early Triassic erythrosuchid. Here, we expand understanding of erythrosuchid anatomy by providing the first detailed and comprehensive description of the holotype of Garjainia prima. We consider ‘Vjushkovia triplicostata’ to be a junior synonym of Garjainia prima, because of their extremely similar morphology, with the two character states that differ between them being variable intraspecifically in some other diapsids. A new phylogenetic analysis recovered a monophyletic Garjainia as sister to Middle Triassic erythrosuchids and recovered Fugusuchus hejiapanensis as sister to all other erythrosuchids. Branch support for Erythrosuchidae is low, but the Middle Triassic erythrosuchid clade is well supported by characters with low homoplasy, indicating that their morphology was specialized in ways rarely explored by other Triassic archosauromorphs.Fil: Ezcurra, Martin Daniel. University of Birmingham; Reino Unido. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Oficina de Coordinación Administrativa Parque Centenario. Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturales “Bernardino Rivadavia”; ArgentinaFil: Gower, David J. Natural History Museum; Reino UnidoFil: Sennikov, Andrey G. Kazan Federal University; Rusia. Borissiak Paleontological Institute; RusiaFil: Butler, Richard J. University of Birmingham; Reino Unid

    Appendix S3

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    Unadjusted matrix including Dorosuchus neoetus in nexus format

    Appendix S2

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    Appendix of strict consensus trees from all analyses carried out

    Appendix S1

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    Appendix of measurements of specimens of Dorosuchus neoetus
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