Abstract

Non-ophidian ophidiomorphs, colloquially referred to as ‘dolichosaurs,’ are small-bodied aquatic lizards that lived in shallow seaways, rivers, and reef environments during the Late Cretaceous. Preservational, geographic, and taphonomic biases in this group make trends in biodiversity difficult to assess. This is exemplified by the fact that the majority of the described species are monotypic and known only from single specimens, imparting very little information on morphological or spatial variation. Here we present a revision of the spatial and temporal distributions of non-ophidian ophidiomorph lizards (‘dolichosaurs’) from Cretaceous sediments worldwide. The fossil record of dolichosaurs begins in the Valanginian (Early Cretaceous). The late Early Cretaceous records are sparse but suggest a wide geographic distribution spanning the Tethys and Western Pacific. This is followed by a dense Cenomanian record from Tethyan and British deposits, and rarer specimens from North America. Though there is a substantial drop in the number of specimens recorded from the Turonian-Maastrichtian, these rare occurrences represent the largest geographical distribution of dolichosaurs: spanning Europe, North America, and South America before going extinct during the end-Cretaceous mass extinction. These occurrences indicate that ophidiomorphs most likely originated in the Jurassic Tethys and continued to radiate spatially and phylogenetically until the end of the Mesozoic, showing much more temporally and environmentally diverse patterns than previously indicated.

Highlights

  • The early Late Cretaceous is undoubtedly one of the most interesting periods in the evolution of squamates

  • Grouped into a monophyletic family, Dolichosauridae, which was established for the species Dolichosaurus longicollis (Kramberger, 1892), there are currently 15 species (11 genera) that are generally ascribed to the family

  • The Eagle Ford is the only formation in the Western Interior to produce more than one small marine squamate: the dolichosaur Coniasaurus crassidens (Bell et al, 1982; Jacobs et al, 2005a) and the basal mosasauroid Dallasaurus turneri (Bell and Polcyn, 2005)

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The early Late Cretaceous is undoubtedly one of the most interesting periods in the evolution of squamates. This period lasted from the late Albian (∼100 mya) to the late Maastrichtian (∼66 mya) and was marked by multiple transgressive/regressive events (Kauffman and Caldwell, 1993; Robinson Roberts and Kirschbaum, 1995) This shallow epicontinental seaway, along with the Tethys Sea, has the densest concentration of Cretaceous small marine squamates, though most of the occurrences in the Western Interior are assigned to a single genus: Coniasaurus. The Eagle Ford (spanning the early Cenomanian to latest Turonian of Texas) is the only formation in the Western Interior to produce more than one small marine squamate: the dolichosaur Coniasaurus crassidens (Bell et al, 1982; Jacobs et al, 2005a) and the basal mosasauroid Dallasaurus turneri (Bell and Polcyn, 2005). The locality from which the fossil was recovered (near Nardò, Lecce, Puglia) is known for its fossiliferous limestones, which were deposited in a shallow

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