PEIROSAURINAE, Geroto & Bertini, 2019
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1093/zoolinnean/zly037 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:03DAADC2-E954-42C5-B44D-55927DF55837 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5715079 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C35358-FFC1-936A-FE8B-3B89FD9E92B4 |
treatment provided by |
Carolina |
scientific name |
PEIROSAURINAE |
status |
subfam. nov. |
PEIROSAURINAE SUBFAM. NOV.
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:647D2A18-0461-45A6-8304-72FFF18F427C
Diagnosis
Crocodyliformes with a heavily sculpted mandible and skull ( Gasparini, 1982; Gasparini et al., 1991); moderately high snout and a large wedged maxillary process inserted dorsolaterally between the premaxilla; a high maxillary notch; anterolaterally oriented external nares separated by the nasals; nasals lacking contact with the lacrimals; large and paired supraorbitals; broad and partly divided internal nares located between the palatine and pterygoid; a broad and anteroventrally inclined basisphenoid that is exposed only in occipital view; a supraoccipital that does not take up part of the cranial roof; the basioccipital has an elongated central crest and heavy lateral bumps; two to three teeth posterior to the anterior margin of the suborbital fenestra; subcircular teeth that are moderately compressed, with anterior and posterior serrated edges. Additionally, P. torminni , U. terrificus and M. arrudacamposi also have this nasal process.
Etymology
Peirosaurinae was established as the name of the subfamily based on the family Peirosauridae ( Gasparini, 1982) .
Phylogenetic definition
Peirosaurus torminni Price, 1955 and all Crocodyliformes that share a more recent common ancestor with P. torminni than with N. terrestris Woodward, 1896 , B. pachecoi Price, 1945 , S. huenei Price, 1950 , I. jesuinoi Price, 1955 , P. deiseae Campos et al., 2011 , B. franciscoi Iori & Carvalho, 2012 , A. gomesii Price, 1959 , S. icaeorhinus Simpson, 1937 , M. amarali Carvalho & Bertini, 1999 , and C. niloticus Laurent, 1768 .
Discussion
Peirosaurinae ( Fig. 9 View Figure 9 ; node 156 View Figure 1 View Figure 2 View Figure 3 View Figure 4 View Figure 5 View Figure 6 ; refer to the Supplementary Information Data S3 for the consensus tree with the numbered node) consists of H. rebouli , L. palpebrosus , G. peirosauroides , Barcinosuchus gradilis , P. torminni , U. terrificus and M. arrudacamposi . A clade supported by 13 unambiguous synapomorphies was recovered based on: skull height in posterior view higher than wide (10.0); anteroposterior length of the premaxilla in relationship to the rostrum long (> 30% of the total length of the rostrum) (11.1); a premaxilla with a wedge-like process of the maxilla on the lateral surface of the premaxillary–maxillary suture (13.1); perinarial fossa facing anterolaterally (20.2); a foramen on the posterior surface of the base of the postorbital bar (67.3); posterodorsal inclination of the external surface of the occipital portion of the squamosal (110.1); shape of the dentary near the mandibular symphysis, forming an acute angle (183.0); dorsal edge of the dentary in the lateral view with two concave festooned regions (195.2); ziphodont teeth (219.0); lateral or anterolateral external nares (248); a foramen in the perinarial depression of the premaxilla (249.1); a notch for hypertrophied mandibular caniniform teeth on the premaxilla–maxilla suture, with a medial bent border of the premaxilla and maxilla (252.1); and reduced participation of the maxilla at the anterior margin of the suborbital fenestra (264.1).
The aim of this analysis was to provide some internal stability to Peirosauridae , thus both Hamadasuchus and Uberabasuchus were not chosen as internal specifiers of the subfamily Peirosaurinae , given the problems related to specimens of these taxa. The holotype of Hamadasuchus has some differences compared with a more complete specimen described by Larsson & Sues (2007) and the MNHN specimen (MRS 3101). A polytomy between P. torminni , M. arrudacamposi and U. terrificus is caused by an overlap of characteristics with Uberabasuchus recovered in a different position within node 153. Martinelli et al. (2012) and Lio et al. (2015) proposed that P. torminni and U. terrificus are synonymous based on morphological similarities, such as the premaxillary length relative to the rest of the rostrum. The clade is sustained by six non-ambiguous synapomorphies (node 153, Supplementary Information Data S3), hinting that the genus might be the same as the three taxa. That revision, however, is not the scope of this contribution.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
Kingdom |
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Phylum |
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Class |
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Order |
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Family |
PEIROSAURINAE
Geroto, Caio Fabricio Cezar & Bertini, Reinaldo J. 2019 |
B. franciscoi
Iori & Carvalho 2012 |
P. deiseae
Campos 2011 |
M. amarali
Carvalho & Bertini 1999 |
A. gomesii
Price 1959 |
Peirosaurus torminni
Price 1955 |
P. torminni
Price 1955 |
I. jesuinoi
Price 1955 |
S. huenei
Price 1950 |
B. pachecoi
Price 1945 |
S. icaeorhinus
Simpson 1937 |
N. terrestris
Woodward 1896 |
C. niloticus
Laurent 1768 |