Abstract

Crocodylomorphs originated in the Late Triassic and were the only crocodile-line archosaurs to survive the end-Triassic extinction. Recent phylogenetic analyses suggest that the closest relatives of these generally gracile, small-bodied taxa were a group of robust, large-bodied predators known as rauisuchids implying a problematic morphological gap between early crocodylomorphs and their closest relatives. Here we provide a detailed osteological description of the recently named early diverging crocodylomorph Carnufex carolinensis from the Upper Triassic Pekin Formation of North Carolina and assess its phylogenetic position within the Paracrocodylomorpha. Carnufex displays a mosaic of crocodylomorph, rauisuchid, and dinosaurian characters, as well as highly laminar cranial elements and vertebrae, ornamented dermal skull bones, a large, subtriangular antorbital fenestra, and a reduced forelimb. A phylogenetic analysis utilizing a comprehensive dataset of early paracrocodylomorphs and including seven new characters and numerous modifications to characters culled from the literature recovers Carnufex carolinensis as one of the most basal members of Crocodylomorpha, in a polytomy with two other large bodied taxa (CM 73372 and Redondavenator). The analysis also resulted in increased resolution within Crocodylomorpha and a monophyletic clade containing the holotype and two referred specimens of Hesperosuchus as well as Dromicosuchus. Carnufex occupies a key transition at the origin of Crocodylomorpha, indicating that the morphology typifying early crocodylomorphs appeared before the shift to small body size.

Highlights

  • Crocodile-line archosaurs (Pseudosuchia) underwent a rapid radiation in the wake of the Permian-Triassic mass extinction and came to dominate terrestrial ecosystems by the Late Triassic [1]

  • Recent phylogenetic analyses (e.g. [4,8]) recover Rauisuchidae, a group of large-bodied predatory pseudosuchians, as the sister taxon to Crocodylomorpha in a clade dubbed Loricata

  • The referred humerus is considerably smaller than the humerus of the holotype and was found at the same locality; it is referred based on the shared presence of an ectepicondylar crest just proximal to the radial condyle and the similar overall shape of the distal head of the two humeri

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Summary

Introduction

Crocodile-line archosaurs (Pseudosuchia) underwent a rapid radiation in the wake of the Permian-Triassic mass extinction and came to dominate terrestrial ecosystems by the Late Triassic [1]. The posterior portion of the left maxilla (Fig 4) is preserved, including a small area of bone anterior to the antorbital fenestra. The antorbital fossa is present on the anterior extant of the posterior process and is defined by a lateral ridge trending posterodorsally to project slightly into the antorbital fenestra before doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0157528.g004

Results
Conclusion

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