Abstract

The cranial skeleton of the large captorhinid reptile Labidosaurus hamatus, known only from the Lower Permian of Texas, is described on the basis of new, undescribed specimens. Labidosaurus is distinguished from other captorhinids by the more extreme sloping of the ventral (alveolar) margin of the premaxilla, a low dorsum sellae of the parabasisphenoid, a reduced prootic, a narrow stapes, and a relatively small foramen intermandibularis medius. Despite the presence of a single row of teeth in each jaw, the skull of Labidosaurus resembles most closely those of moradisaurines, the large multiple-tooth-rowed captorhinids of the latest Early and Middle Permian. A phylogenetic analysis confirms that the single-tooth-rowed L. hamatus is related most closely to moradisaurines within Captorhinidae, a relationship that supports the hypothesis of a diphyletic origin for multiple rows of marginal teeth in captorhinids (in the genus Captorhinus and in the clade Moradisaurinae). In view of the close relationship between L. hamatus and moradisaurines, which are regarded to have been herbivorous, L. hamatus is a critical taxon for studies of the evolution of herbivory in early tetrapods. L. hamatus shares several trademark features of herbivorous adaptation with moradisaurines, which suggest that this captorhinid species was omnivorous. As such, it represents a transitional taxon between faunivorous basal reptiles and the herbivorous moradisaurines. © 2007 The Linnean Society of London, Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2007, 149, 237–262.

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