A new medium‐sized moradisaurine captorhinid eureptile from the Permian of Mallorca (Balearic Islands, western Mediterranean) and correlation with the co‐occurring ichnogenus Hyloidichnus
R. Matamales‐Andreu, E. Mujal, À. Galobart, J. Fortuny
{"title":"A new medium‐sized moradisaurine captorhinid eureptile from the Permian of Mallorca (Balearic Islands, western Mediterranean) and correlation with the co‐occurring ichnogenus Hyloidichnus","authors":"R. Matamales‐Andreu, E. Mujal, À. Galobart, J. Fortuny","doi":"10.1002/spp2.1498","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Moradisaurine captorhinid eureptiles are one of the best‐known groups of Permian herbivorous tetrapods. Moradisaurines, with several rows of teeth on the maxillae and jaws, first appeared in the Cisuralian and went extinct at the end of the Lopingian; they were especially abundant in the equatorial latitudes of Pangaea. However, the postcranial skeleton of this clade is relatively poorly known, given that most of the species described have been based on skulls. This fact has precluded a detailed correlation with coeval tracks. The present work describes a new moradisaurine genus and species, Tramuntanasaurus tiai, based on an almost complete, semi‐articulated skeleton from the Port des Canonge Formation of Mallorca (Balearic Islands, western Mediterranean), identifying it as the trackmaker of the co‐occurring small‐sized traces of the ichnogenus Hyloidichnus. Apart from documenting the new moradisaurine species, the results presented herein strongly support the hypothesis that Hyloidichnus was produced by both non‐moradisaurine captorhinids and moradisaurines; those of small to medium size, at least, had a very conserved autopodial morphology and gait. Therefore, this study provides new data to infer the trackmakers of Hyloidichnus where bone remains are missing, and thus contributes to our understanding of Permian tetrapod ichnofaunas and tetrapod communities.","PeriodicalId":48705,"journal":{"name":"Papers in Palaeontology","volume":"26 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":2.3000,"publicationDate":"2023-05-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Papers in Palaeontology","FirstCategoryId":"89","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1002/spp2.1498","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"地球科学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"PALEONTOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1
Abstract
Moradisaurine captorhinid eureptiles are one of the best‐known groups of Permian herbivorous tetrapods. Moradisaurines, with several rows of teeth on the maxillae and jaws, first appeared in the Cisuralian and went extinct at the end of the Lopingian; they were especially abundant in the equatorial latitudes of Pangaea. However, the postcranial skeleton of this clade is relatively poorly known, given that most of the species described have been based on skulls. This fact has precluded a detailed correlation with coeval tracks. The present work describes a new moradisaurine genus and species, Tramuntanasaurus tiai, based on an almost complete, semi‐articulated skeleton from the Port des Canonge Formation of Mallorca (Balearic Islands, western Mediterranean), identifying it as the trackmaker of the co‐occurring small‐sized traces of the ichnogenus Hyloidichnus. Apart from documenting the new moradisaurine species, the results presented herein strongly support the hypothesis that Hyloidichnus was produced by both non‐moradisaurine captorhinids and moradisaurines; those of small to medium size, at least, had a very conserved autopodial morphology and gait. Therefore, this study provides new data to infer the trackmakers of Hyloidichnus where bone remains are missing, and thus contributes to our understanding of Permian tetrapod ichnofaunas and tetrapod communities.
腕足类真爬行动物是二叠纪最著名的食草四足动物之一。上颌和下颚上有几排牙齿的moradiaurines,最早出现在顺苏拉纪,在罗平纪末期灭绝;它们在泛大陆的赤道纬度地区尤其丰富。然而,考虑到大多数物种的描述都是基于头骨,这个分支的颅后骨骼相对来说鲜为人知。这一事实排除了与同期轨迹的详细相关性。目前的工作描述了一个新的moradidisurine属和种,Tramuntanasaurus tiai,基于来自马略卡岛(地中海西部巴利亚利群岛)的Port des Canonge组的几乎完整的半关节骨架,并将其确定为同时出现的Hyloidichnus属小型痕迹的追踪者。本文的研究结果有力地支持了Hyloidichnus是由非非二氨基二磺酸的captorhinids和非二氨基二磺酸的captorhinids共同产生的假说;那些小到中等大小的,至少,有一个非常保守的自耳廓形态和步态。因此,本研究提供了新的数据,可以推断出遗失骨骸的Hyloidichnus的足迹,从而有助于我们对二叠纪四足动物和四足动物群落的认识。
期刊介绍:
Papers in Palaeontology is the successor to Special Papers in Palaeontology and a journal of the Palaeontological Association (www.palass.org). The journal is devoted to the publication of papers that document the diversity of past life and its distribution in time and space.
Papers in Palaeontology is devoted to the publication of papers that document the diversity of past life and its distribution in time and space. As a sister publication to Palaeontology its focus is on descriptive research, including the descriptions of new taxa, systematic revisions of higher taxa, detailed biostratigraphical and biogeographical documentation, and descriptions of floras and faunas from specific localities or regions. Most contributions are expected to be less than 30 pp long but longer contributions will be considered if the material merits it, including single topic parts.
The journal publishes a wide variety of papers on palaeontological topics covering:
palaeozoology,
palaeobotany,
systematic studies,
palaeoecology,
micropalaeontology,
palaeobiogeography,
functional morphology,
stratigraphy,
taxonomy,
taphonomy,
palaeoenvironmental reconstruction,
palaeoclimate analysis,
biomineralization studies.