BIOLOGY 622 – FALL 2014 BASAL AMNIOTA - STRUCTURE AND PHYLOGENY WEEK – 9 PROCOLOPHONIDAE and RELATIVES S. S. SUMIDA.

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BIOLOGY 622 – FALL 2014 BASAL AMNIOTA - STRUCTURE AND PHYLOGENY WEEK – 9 PROCOLOPHONIDAE and RELATIVES S. S. SUMIDA

Procolophonids have been variously placed, difficult to define, and not surprisingly considered as a potential ancestors to turtles. As a group they appear to hang together by virtue of the broadly flared shape of their cheeks. Recall that this is the first group we examine this term that survived the end-Permian extinction, persisting until the end of the Triassic. However, complicating this is the position of the tetrapod Owenetta, a taxon sometimes included in the group, and sometimes considered as its sister-taxon. Cisneros worked on the phylogeny of the procolophonids in 2008, but excluded Owenetta from the family, only placing in the larger Procolophonoidea. So, brief mention of Owenetta is warranted.

OWENETTA Owenetta is a small parareptilian genus known form the Upper Permian to the Lower Triassic of South Africa.

Skull of Owenetta

Reisz and Scott (2002) considered Owenetta + Barasaurus (Late Permian, Madagascar) to belong to their own clade known as the Owenettidae characterized by: a large postfrontal that prevents contact between the parietal and postorbital a deep temporal emargination between the jugal and quadratojugal a rectangular supratemporal humerus lacking entepicondylar foramen The last character isn’t entirely useful, as there are other groups with this condition.

Reisz and Scott (2002) - Owenettidae characterized by: a large postfrontal that prevents contact between the parietal and postorbital a deep temporal emargination between the jugal and quadratojugal a rectangular supratemporal humerus lacking entepicondylar foramen

PROCOLOPHONOIDEA Procolophonids have been variously placed, difficult to define, and not surprisingly considered as a potential ancestors to turtles. As a group they appear to hang together by virtue of the broadly flared shape of their cheeks. This is the first group we examine this term that survived the end-Permian extinction, persisting until the end of the Triassic. Cisneros (2008) defined the group with the following features: Maxilla premaxillary subnarial process absent. External naris subcircular or dorsoventrally expanded. Maxillary depression present. Three to four premaxillary teeth. Maxillary teeth with labiolingually expanded bases present. Ten to 12 maxillary teeth. Anterior vomerine dentition consisting of true teeth.

Maxilla premaxillary subnarial process absent. External naris subcircular or dorsoventrally expanded. Maxillary depression present. Three to four premaxillary teeth. Maxillary teeth with labiolingually expanded bases present. Ten to 12 maxillary teeth. Anterior vomerine dentition consisting of true teeth.