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A new archosauromorph from South America provides insights on the early diversification of tanystropheids

Tiane Macedo de Oliveira, Felipe L. Pinheiro, Átila Augusto Stock Da‐Rosa, Sérgio Dias‐da‐Silva, Leonardo Kerber

2020PLoS ONE27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

After the Permo-Triassic mass extinction, the archosauromorph fossil record is comparatively abundant and ecologically diverse. Among early archosauromorphs, tanystropheids gained considerable attention due to the presence of extreme skeletal adaptations in response to sometimes overspecialized lifestyles. The origin and early radiation of Tanystropheidae, however, remains elusive. Here, a new Early Triassic archosauromorph is described and phylogenetically recovered as the sister-taxon of Tanystropheidae. The new specimen, considered a new genus and species, comprises a complete posterior limb articulated with pelvic elements. It was recovered from the Sanga do Cabral Formation (Sanga do Cabral Supersequence, Lower Triassic of the Paraná Basin, Southern Brazil), which has already yielded a typical Early Triassic vertebrate assemblage of temnospondyls, procolophonoids, and scarce archosauromorph remains. This new taxon provides insights on the early diversification of tanystropheids and represents further evidence for a premature wide geographical distribution of this clade. The morphology of the new specimen is consistent with a terrestrial lifestyle, suggesting that this condition was plesiomorphic for Tanystropheidae.

Topics & Concepts

TaxonExtinction eventBiologyCladeVertebrateSister groupDiversification (marketing strategy)PaleontologyGenusEcologyExtinction (optical mineralogy)ZoologyEvolutionary biologyPhylogeneticsPopulationBiological dispersalMarketingGeneDemographyBiochemistryBusinessSociologyPaleontology and Evolutionary BiologyIchthyology and Marine BiologyEvolution and Paleontology Studies
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