3D models related to the publication: A new traversodontid cynodont with a peculiar postcanine dentition from the Middle/Late Triassic of Namibia and dental evolution in basal gomphodonts.

MorphoMuseuM ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (5) ◽  
pp. e123
Author(s):  
Christophe Hendrickx ◽  
Leandro C. Gaetano ◽  
Jonah N. Choiniere ◽  
Helke Mocke ◽  
Fernando Abdala
2015 ◽  
Vol 112 (51) ◽  
pp. E7101-E7109 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhe-Xi Luo ◽  
Stephen M. Gatesy ◽  
Farish A. Jenkins ◽  
William W. Amaral ◽  
Neil H. Shubin

As one of the earliest-known mammaliaforms, Haramiyavia clemmenseni from the Rhaetic (Late Triassic) of East Greenland has held an important place in understanding the timing of the earliest radiation of the group. Reanalysis of the type specimen using high-resolution computed tomography (CT) has revealed new details, such as the presence of the dentary condyle of the mammalian jaw hinge and the postdentary trough for mandibular attachment of the middle ear—a transitional condition of the predecessors to crown Mammalia. Our tests of competing phylogenetic hypotheses with these new data show that Late Triassic haramiyids are a separate clade from multituberculate mammals and are excluded from the Mammalia. Consequently, hypotheses of a Late Triassic diversification of the Mammalia that depend on multituberculate affinities of haramiyidans are rejected. Scanning electron microscopy study of tooth-wear facets and kinematic functional simulation of occlusion with virtual 3D models from CT scans confirm that Haramiyavia had a major orthal occlusion with the tallest lingual cusp of the lower molars occluding into the lingual embrasure of the upper molars, followed by a short palinal movement along the cusp rows alternating between upper and lower molars. This movement differs from the minimal orthal but extensive palinal occlusal movement of multituberculate mammals, which previously were regarded as relatives of haramiyidans. The disparity of tooth morphology and the diversity of dental functions of haramiyids and their contemporary mammaliaforms suggest that dietary diversification is a major factor in the earliest mammaliaform evolution.


PeerJ ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
pp. e10490
Author(s):  
Laura Dziomber ◽  
Walter G. Joyce ◽  
Christian Foth

Turtles are a successful clade of reptiles that originated in the Late Triassic. The group adapted during its evolution to different types of environments, ranging from dry land to ponds, rivers, and the open ocean, and survived all Mesozoic and Cenozoic extinction events. The body of turtles is characterized by a shell, which has been hypothesized to have several biological roles, like protection, thermal and pH regulation, but also to be adapted in its shape to the ecology of the animal. However, only few studies have investigated the relationships between shell shape and ecology in a global context or clarified if shape can be used to diagnose habitat preferences in fossil representatives. Here, we assembled a three-dimensional dataset of 69 extant turtles and three fossils, in particular, the Late Triassic Proganochelys quenstedtii and Proterochersis robusta and the Late Jurassic Plesiochelys bigleri to test explicitly for a relationship between shell shape and ecology. 3D models were obtained using surface scanning and photogrammetry. The general shape of the shells was captured using geometric morphometrics. The habitat ecology of extant turtles was classified using the webbing of their forelimbs as a proxy. Principal component analysis (PCA) highlights much overlap between habitat groups. Discriminant analyses suggests significant differences between extant terrestrial turtles, extant fully aquatic (i.e., marine and riverine) turtles, and an unspecialized assemblage that includes extant turtles from all habitats, mostly freshwater aquatic forms. The paleoecology of the three fossil species cannot be determined with confidence, as all three fall within the unspecialized category, even if Plesiochelys bigleri plots closer to fully aquatic turtles, while the two Triassic species group closer to extant terrestrial forms. Although the shape of the shell of turtles indeed contains an ecological signal, it is overall too weak to uncover using shell shape in paleoecological studies, at least with the methods we selected.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Valentin Samuel Kelz ◽  
Pauline GUENSER ◽  
Michele Mazza ◽  
Manuel Rigo ◽  
Emilia Jarochowska

Conodont dental elements are distinguished by their high disparity and rapid morphological evolution. P1 elements located in the pharynx are the most rapidly evolving, but their function in the animal has been only investigated in a handful of taxa and proposed to be analogous to mammal molars. This hypothesis predicts that their surface area should show positive allometry with respect to element length, as has been previously identified in 2D projections in two Carboniferous taxa. Here we apply the same method to test this hypothesis in 3D models of platform-bearing P1 elements of two common Late Triassic taxa, Metapolygnathus communisti and Epigondolella rigoi. We further hypothesise that these commonly co-occurring taxa differed in their growth allometry, reflecting their different trophic niches. Platform length grew isometrically with respect to element length, whereas log-transformed platform area showed positive allometry with respect to element length, with slopes equal 3.86 in M. communisti and 4.16 in E. rigoi, supporting a function of the platform analogous to molars and trophic differentiation. We cross-tested the latter interpretation by dental topographic analysis using Dirichlet Normal Energy (DNE). Specimens of the adult growth stage of E. rigoi showed higher DNE values than specimens of the same growth stage in M. communisti, consistent with stronger positive allometry of platform surface and with a higher demand for energy in this species. DNE values of platform surface increased linearly in function of element length and log-transformed platform area, indicating no ontogenetic changes. Based on DNE values available for primates, those of the adult growth stages were similar to those reported for insectivores or folivores in the case of E. rigoi and for folivores or omnivores in the case of M. communisti. Previous studies applying morphological and ultrastructural proxies for the dietary position of conodonts addressed mostly stratigraphically older conodont taxa, but our results indicate that Late Triassic species occupied the predator/scavenger niche in spite of the highly developed diversity of gnathostomes in this niche. We also show that within this broad niche, co-occurring taxa differed in their diets, which supports trophic diversification as an important driver of the remarkable disparity of their elements.


2020 ◽  
Vol 18 (20) ◽  
pp. 1669-1706 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christophe Hendrickx ◽  
Leandro C. Gaetano ◽  
Jonah N. Choiniere ◽  
Helke Mocke ◽  
Fernando Abdala

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