Litcius/Paper detail

A new species of baenid turtle from the Early Cretaceous Lakota Formation of South Dakota

Walter G. Joyce, Yann Rollot, Richard L. Cifelli

2020Fossil record23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract. Baenidae is a clade of paracryptodiran turtles known from the late Early Cretaceous to Eocene of North America. The proposed sister-group relationship of Baenidae to Pleurosternidae, a group of turtles known from sediments dated as early as the Late Jurassic, suggests a ghost lineage that crosses the early Early Cretaceous. We here document a new species of paracryptodiran turtle, Lakotemys australodakotensis gen. and sp. nov., from the Early Cretaceous (Berriasian to Valanginian) Lakota Formation of South Dakota based on a poorly preserved skull and two partial shells. Lakotemys australodakotensis is most readily distinguished from all other named Late Jurassic to Early Cretaceous paracryptodires by having a broad, baenid-like skull with expanded triturating surfaces and a finely textured shell with a large suprapygal I that laterally contacts peripheral X and XI and an irregularly shaped vertebral V that does not lap onto neural VIII and that forms two anterolateral processes that partially separate the vertebral IV from contacting pleural IV. A phylogenetic analysis suggests that Lakotemys australodakotensis is a baenid, thereby partially closing the previously noted gap in the fossil record.

Topics & Concepts

CretaceousTurtle (robot)PaleontologySkullSister groupLineage (genetic)OsteologyBiologyGeologyCladePhylogenetic treeZoologyEcologyBiochemistryGenePaleontology and Evolutionary BiologyTurtle Biology and ConservationIchthyology and Marine Biology