Laelaps, Cope, 1866
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https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.3458149 |
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https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3513128 |
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https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03BD87E2-D52B-FFF5-FF89-D60B1F1BF8C3 |
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Plazi |
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Laelaps |
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. On the genus Laelaps ; by Edward D. C ope. (Communicated for this Journal.)
—As some confusion respecting the name of this genus has arisen, it appears best to attempt to correct it at as early a day as possible. This confusion, as it appears to me, has been created by remarks contained in an essay by Dr. Joseph Leidy, published in the last number of the Proceedings of the Academy, entitled “ Remarks on a jaw-fragment of Megalosaurus ."
In the Transactions of the American Philosophical Society, xi, p. 143, Dr. Leidy describes a large carnivorous reptile allied to Megalosaurus , under the name of Dinodon horridus . He assigns to it, with some expression of doubt, teeth of two distinct forms, viz: some having a lenticular transverse section, with crenation on the two margins in part, and others having a lenticular section, truncate to a greater or less degree, in place of its angles, and therefore crenate on three edges in part.
If Dr. Leidy had left the matter undecided as to which of these he regarded as the type of the genus Dinodon , the almost universal practice of naturalists would refer the name to that form which should not be first thereafter discovered to be distinct and named.
I have been of the opinion that the two forms of teeth included by Dr. Leidy under the head of Dinodon really belong to distinct animals, and Leidy is also of that opinion. In 1866, in describing the genus Laelaps (Proc. Acad., p. 279), I said: “The genus Laelaps belongs to the family Dinodontidae , which is characterized * * by its compressed sabre-shaped teeth. It differs * * from Dinodon in that teeth of the latter have two posterior serrate edges separated by a posterior plane.” This, then, according to the usage of naturalists, establishes the name of Dinodon for the truncate teeth, and Laelaps for the two-edged.
Dr. Leidy, however, in an essay just published (Proc. Acad.. 1808, p. 198), in expressing his belief in the distinctness of the two genera, states that “teeth of like shape” (i. e., like Megalosaurus ), “referred by me to Dinodon , alone belong to this genus, and names the species represented by the truncate teeth, or the true Dinodon horridus , Aublysodon mirandus . He then goes onto say: “Future discovery may prove Laelaps and Dinodon identical," and on p. 199: * * “An enemy which may perhaps on nearer comparison of corresponding parts prove to be another species of the same genus, until now supposed to be different, under the names of Dinodon and Laelaps .” It is thus sufficiently obvious that the proposition is to refer Laelaps as a synonym of of Dinodon . It appears to me, on the other hand, that is contrary to the rules of nomenclature, and the principles which lie at their root, and that the name Aublysodon is a synonvm of Dinodon.
This is, however, on the supposition that Leidy had left the question open or uncertain, as to which of the two forms of teeth was characteristic of his genus Dinodon . I think, however, he has not left it undecided, and I am supported in this by the opinion of von Meyer.
The teeth of Laelaps , both from New Jersey and Nebraska, do not differ from those of Megalosaurus , while those of Dinodon do. It was not to be supposed that Dinodon was established on teeth of the former character, as the practice of describing species and genera, without a basis of distinctive characters, is an unusual and bad one, and ought not to be tolerated in natural science.* In describing Dinodon , Leidy says the Laelaps-like teeth resemble those of Megalosaurus , and in his recent article in the Proc. Academy (p. 1 98), that they are “identical in character with those of Megalosaurus .”
He, however, specifies that the truncate teeth of Dinodon are really those that characterize it, in the following words: ‘‘As the entire dentition of Megalosaurus has not yet been ascertained, it may turn out to be the case that in other parts of the jaws than those known it possesses teeth like the ones above described as pe culiar. Should, on future discovery, such a condition of things be proved to exist, Dinodon would then cease to be anything more than a second species of Megalosaurus .” The truncate teeth are then the “ peculiar” feature of Dinodon , and all that prevents the species from being referred to Megalosaurus ..
Von Meyer has understood this language as I have, and has believed that the teeth now ascribed by Leidy to Aublysodon , are really characteristic of Dinodon . He says (Palaeontographica, vii, p. 267) that while some of the teeth are identical with those of Megalosaurus , “the others indicate such peculiarity, that Leidy, who has made the investigation, thought it necessary to characterize the animal as distinct from Megalosaurus , under the name of Dinodon horridus ”
It is therefore evident that the Laelaps-like teeth described under Dinodon are really those that require a new name, it any. I will not give them a name, however, since there is no evidence that they differ from either Megalosaurus or Laelaps , though of course the probability is, that they belong to a species of the latter genus.
Although Aublysodon would thus be a synonym ot Dinodon . it is not an altogether useless name, since the latter was given years ago to a genus of serpents by Duméril and Bibron, and may therefore be suppressed. The name of the family Dinodontidiae also, which I gave in compliment to Dr. Leidy, may also be disused.
In the same way, a genus of extinct reptiles was distinguished as Tomodon Leidy , a name long since given to a genus of American serpents. Not liking to substitute a generic name given by another, by one of my own, I have requested Dr. Leidy to give me one by which to replace it.
The synonymy of these genera will then be
Dinodon Leidy, 1868 , View Cited Treatment not of 1857.
Laelaps aquilunguis Cope , Proc. Ac. Nat Sci. Phil., 1866 View Cited Treatment .
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Laelaps
Cope, E. D. 1868 |