Abstract

Fragments of turtle shell are known from several Upper Cretaceous formations in Mexico, including Corral de Enmedio and Packard Shale, Sonora; Aguja and Cerro del Pueblo, Coahuila; San Carlos, Chihuahua; El Gallo, Baja California; and Ocozocoautla, Chiapas. Turtles are important members of Upper Cretaceous vertebrate assemblages throughout North America and are considered a useful tool to define biogeographic patterns. The Upper Cretaceous sedimentary rocks exposed in the Aguja Formation record the final transgressive/regressive sequence of the Western Interior Cretaceous Seaway and the subsequent transition from a marine to terrestrial environment. The total area of outcrops is small compared to correlative exposures of these strata elsewhere in North America, in spite of this, numerous invertebrate and vertebrate fossils have been collected. The Aguja Formation in Texas preserves one of the southernmost well-studied Upper Cretaceous (Campanian) terrestrial vertebrate faunas in North America; contrary to what happens with the outcrops in northern Chihuahua, where the record of terrestrial vertebrates is scarce and especially those related to Testudines. Non-marine strata of the Aguja Formation do not appear to be present farther south in Mexico, and this is the reason why the Aguja fauna is relevant to documenting latitudinal variation in Campanian continental faunal associations. In this paper, the richness of Upper Cretaceous turtles collected from three localities within the Aguja Formation in Chihuahua is reviewed. Six taxa are recognized based on shell fragments with distinctive sculpture patterns: stem cryptodires, including cf. Baenidae, c.f. Denazinemys nodosa and cf. Compsemys victa, and crown group cryptodires including trionychians (trionchids and Basilemys sp.) and a kinosternoid (cf. Yelmochelys rosarioae). With the recognition of these taxa, new records are reported for the Aguja Formation (e.g. cf. Yelmochelys rosarioae) and Mexico (e.g. c.f. Denazinemys nodosa). The knowledge of Cretaceous turtle richness of the Aguja Formation and Mexico is increased and confirms the proposal of the variability richness along the North American localities. This latitudinal variability suggests that at any time turtles would have had a climatically controlled northern limit of distribution, and the richness of turtles would have decreased as this limit was reached.

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