Abstract

Morphological phylogenies stand in a major conflict with molecular hypotheses regarding the phylogeny of Cryptodira, the most diverse and widely distributed clade of extant turtles. However, molecular hypotheses are often considered a better estimate of phylogeny given that it is more consistent with the stratigraphic and geographic distribution of extinct taxa. That morphology fails to reproduce the molecular topology partly originates from problematic character polarization due to yet another contradiction around the composition of the cryptodiran stem lineage. Extinct sinemydids are one of these problematic clades: they have been either placed among stem-cryptodires, stem-chelonioid sea turtles, or even stem-turtles. A new sinemydid from the Early Cretaceous Jehol Biota (Yixian Formation, Barremian-Early Aptian) of China, Xiaochelys ningchengensis gen. et sp. nov., allows for a reassessment of the phylogenetic position of Sinemydidae. Our analysis indicates that sinemydids mostly share symplesiomorphies with sea turtles and their purported placement outside the crown-group of turtles is an artefact of previous datasets. The best current phylogenetic estimate is therefore that sinemydids are part of the stem lineage of Cryptodira together with an array of other Jurassic to Cretaceous taxa. Our study further emphasises the importance of using molecular scaffolds in global turtle analyses.

Highlights

  • Cryptodires represent the largest group of living turtles (Testudines) and exhibit a wide range of habitat preferences from terrestrial to freshwater to marine[1]

  • The description of Xiaochelys ningchengensis gen. et sp. nov. is based on the holotype and only specimen (PMOL-AR00210) preserved on two slabs

  • The specimen originates from the Early Cretaceous Yixian Formation (Jehol Biota) of the Ningcheng Basin exposed at Yangshuwanzi Village, Bisiyingzi Township, Ningcheng County, Inner Mongolia Province (Fig. 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Cryptodires represent the largest group of living turtles (Testudines) and exhibit a wide range of habitat preferences from terrestrial to freshwater to marine[1]. Their origin and early evolution can be traced back to a diverse assemblage of fossil turtles from the Middle to Late Jurassic to the Early Cretaceous of Asia[2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13]. The Jehol Biota sinemydids are of particular importance for unravelling the sequence of morphological evolution around the base of crown Cryptodira. With the help of a revised morphological dataset we here reassess the monophyly of Asian and North American Cretaceous basal pan-cryptodire turtles and test between three competing hypotheses that differ by viewing sinemyidids as (i) stem-cryptodires, (ii) stem-turtles or (iii) stem-chelonioid sea turtles

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