Abstract

Abstract Temnospondyls—a major component of Permian and Carboniferous terrestrial ecosystems—display great diversity in skull shapes and proportions. To quantify and interpret this diversity, we conducted a geometric morphometric analysis using 45 landmarks on the dorsal skull surface of 90 species with well-represented cranial material. Results show a correlation between morphospace occupation and phylogenetic proximity of taxa for trees in which dvinosaurs and dissorophoids are sister groups and join an edopoid-–eryopoid–basal archegosauriform clade. Most large groups of Carboniferous and Permian temnospondyls occupy specific areas of morphospace. Nearest-neighbor analyses reveal significantly greater taxon clustering than expected under either uniform or Gaussian null models. Size correlates strongly with shape across the whole data set, highlighting the association of some features (short, broad snout; large orbits) with small size. A significant relationship between size and shape is not observed in ...

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