Abstract

Here, a fragment of a mandible recently discovered in the Cerro Zamuro site (Castillo Formation, Lara State, northwestern Venezuela) is assigned to the giant gavialoid Gryposuchus. This specimen, recovered from putative brackish environments of the early Miocene (~18 Ma) age, is unequivocally the earliest record of the genus in South America. Gryposuchus, together with the other gryposuchine previously recognized from the Castillo Formation, Siquisiquesuchus venezuelensis, increases the early Miocene taxonomic diversity of the group in the northern Neotropics. This new information from the Castillo Formation supports the conclusion that early gryposuchine evolutionary stages were in coastal, shallow marine or brackish environments, while the presence of some genera, such as Gryposuchus, in middle to late Miocene freshwater environments, is secondary habitat colonization late in the evolution of the clade. Freshwater colonization is probably the result of the gradual adaptation of early marine-adapted gryposuchines to the extensive estuarine-like environments of northern South America lowlands associated with marine transgressions that systematically occurred during the middle Eocene to early Oligocene. This new record is evidence of the wide chronological distribution of Gryposuchus in northern South America, highlighting the importance of this area as the center of origin and radiation of this successful Miocene gavialoid.

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