Deuterosaurus

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Deuterosaurus
Temporal range: Capitanian
Deuterosaurus2DB.jpg
Deuterosaurus biarmicus
Scientific classification OOjs UI icon edit-ltr.svg
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Clade: Synapsida
Clade: Therapsida
Suborder: Dinocephalia
Family: Deuterosauridae
Genus: Deuterosaurus
Eichwald, 1846
Type species
Deuterosaurus biarmicus
Eichwald, 1846
Species
  • D. biarmicusEichwald, 1846
  • ?D. jubilaei(Nopcsa, 1928)
  • D. seeleyiNopcsa, 1902

Deuterosaurus is an extinct genus of dinocephalian therapsids, one of the non-mammalian synapsids dominating the land during the late Paleozoic.

Contents

Etymology

Deuterosaurus comes from Greek δευτερος "second" and σαυρος "lizard". [1]

Species

Anatomy

D. jubilaei head Deuterosaurus jubilaei.jpg
D. jubilaei head

Skulls of Deuterosaurus are well known from several finds. It is over 10 inches (25 cm) high, [10] with a long snout and conical teeth. Like all anteosaurs, the skull possessed long, dagger-like canine teeth. The skull was rather short for an anteosaur, with a broad cheek region, indicating a very strong bite. The eyes were partly slanted forward, giving it at least partial stereo vision. The pineal eye, though small, had a well formed opening right atop the brain case.

Deuterosaurus was a very large animal, the size of a modern grizzly bear. T. H. Huxley mistakenly considered it to be a dinosaur. [11] Judging from related therapsids, the short but massive legs were held splayed, much like a modern crocodile. When walking, the tail would have swung sideways, like in modern reptiles.

Biology

Deuterosaurus is found in what is now Siberia, which in the Permian was dominated by temperate lowlands. Deuterosaurus was among the largest animals of its day, and has variously been interpreted as a herbivore or carnivore. While the large canines may indicate the ability to kill prey, the short legs and massive body would have made it unsuited as a long distance runner, and better suited to eating plants. Then again, the possible stereoscopic vision again indicates an ambush style carnivore, and the rather blunt, cone-like post canine teeth can be interpreted both ways. Possibly Deuterosaurus was omnivorous, like a modern bear.

Deuterosaurus, like all its therapsid cousins, probably laid eggs. A remarkable thickening of the skull above the eyes indicates it may have engaged in head-butting, possibly in connection with mating or territorial disputes.

See also

Related Research Articles

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<i>Styracocephalus</i>

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<i>Niaftasuchus</i> Extinct genus of therapsids

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Akidnognathidae</span> Extinct family of therapsids

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Venyukovioidea</span> Extinct infraorder of therapsids

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<i>Pampaphoneus</i> Extinct genus of therapsids

Pampaphoneus is an extinct genus of carnivorous dinocephalian therapsid belonging to the family Anteosauridae. It lived 268 to 265 million years ago during the Wordian age of the Guadalupian period in what is now Brazil. Pampaphoneus is known by an almost complete skull with the lower jaw still articulated, discovered on the lands of the Boqueirão Farm, near the city of São Gabriel, in the state of Rio Grande do Sul. A second specimen from the same locality was reported in 2019 and 2020 but has not yet been described. It is composed of a skull associated with postcranial remains. It is the first South American species of dinocephalian to have been described. The group was previously known in South America only by a few isolated teeth and a jaw fragment reported in 2000 in the same region of Brazil. Phylogenetic analysis conducted by Cisneros and colleagues reveals that Pampaphoneus is closely related to anteosaurs from European Russia, indicating a closer faunal relationship between South America and Eastern Europe than previously thought, thus promoting a Pangea B continental reconstruction.

<i>Sinophoneus</i> Extinct genus of therapsids

Sinophoneus is an extinct genus of carnivorous dinocephalian therapsid belonging to the family Anteosauridae. It lived 272 to 270 million years ago at the beginning of the Middle Permian in what is now the Gansu Province in northern China. It is known by a skull of an adult individual, as well as by many skulls of juvenile specimens. The latter were first considered as belonging to a different animal, named Stenocybus, before being reinterpreted as immature Sinophoneus. Sinophoneus shows a combination of characters present in other anteosaurs. Its bulbous profile snout and external nostrils located in front of the canine are reminiscent of the basal anteosaur Archaeosyodon, while its massive transverse pterygoids processes with enlarged distal ends are more similar to the more derived anteosaurs Anteosaurus and Titanophoneus. First phylogenetic analyzes identified Sinophoneus as the most basal Anteosaurinae. A more recent analysis positioned it outside the Anteosaurinae and Syodontinae subclades, and recovers it as the most basal Anteosauridae.

Novocynodon is an extinct genus of therapsids from the Middle Permian of Russia. Fossils have been found in Alexandrovsky District, Orenburg Oblast. The type and only species is Novocynodon kutorgai. It was classified as a thrinaxodontid cynodont when first described in 2012, but this was disputed by Kammerer (2014), who argued that it might instead be a juvenile anomodont or dinocephalian.

Parasumina is an extinct genus of anomodont known from the late Capitanian age at the end of the middle Permian period of European Russia. The type and only species is Parasuminia ivakhnenkoi. It was closely related to Suminia, another Russian anomodont, and was named for its resemblance. Little is known about Parasuminia as the only fossils are of fragmentary pieces of the skull and jaw, but the known remains suggest that its head and jaws were deeper and more robust than those of Suminia, and with shorter, stouter teeth. However, despite these differences they appear to have been similar animals with a similarly complex method of processing vegetation.

References

  1. Eichwald 1861, p. 496.
  2. Eichwald 1846, p. 457.
  3. Eichwald 1848, p. 16.
  4. 1 2 Ivakhnenko 2008, p. 110.
  5. Nopcsa 1902.
  6. Boonstra 1965.
  7. Tchudinov 1983.
  8. Efremov 1954, p. 103.
  9. Ivakhnenko 2008, p. 108.
  10. "Researches on the structure, organization, and classification of the fossil ilia.-VIII. Further evidences of the skeleton in deuterosaurus and Rhopa-n, from the permian rocks of Russia". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. (B.). 185: 663–717. 1894-12-31. doi:10.1098/rstb.1894.0015. ISSN   0264-3839.
  11. Huxley, T.H. (1869). "Triassic Dinosauria" Nature 1: 23-24.

Works cited

  • Boonstra, L. D. (1965). "The Russian dinocephalian Deuterosaurus". Annals of the South African Museum. 48 (12): 233–236.
  • Efremov, I. A. (1954). "Фауна наземных позвоночных в пермских медистых песчаниках западного приуралья". Труды палеонтогического института (in Russian).
  • Eichwald, Eduard (1846). Геогнозия преимущественно в отношении к России[Geognosy relatively to Russia mainly] (in Russian). St. Petersburg.
  • Eichwald, Eduard (1848), Ueber die Saurier des Kupferführenden Zechsteins Russlands (in German)
  • Eichwald, Eduard (1861). Палеонтологія Россіи. Древній Періодъ. II. Фауна Граувакііовой, Горііопзвестковой И Мвдпстослаішеватой Формацій Россіи (in Russian).
  • Ivakhnenko, M. F. (2008). "Подкласс Theromorpha" [Subclass Theromorpha]. In Ivakhnenko, M. F.; Kurochkin, E. N. (eds.). Ископаемые позвоночные России и сопредельных стран: Ископаемые рептилии и птицы: Часть 1[Fossil vertebrates of Russia and adjacent countries: Fossil reptiles and birds: Part 1] (in Russian). pp. 101–183.
  • Nopcsa, Franz (1902). "Über Rippen eines Deuterosauriden (Deuterosaurus Seeleyi nov. spec.?)". Beiträge zur Paläontologie Österreich-Ungarns und des Orients (in German). 14: 185–194.
  • Tchudinov, P. K. (1983). "Ранние терапсиды" [Early Therapsids]. Труды палеонтогического института (in Russian). 202.
  • Palæos
  • Brithopodidae/Anteosauridae Archived 2018-10-05 at the Wayback Machine
  • Permian-Triassic extinctions