Abstract

Mesosaurs have been considered strictly aquatic animals. Their adaptations to the aquatic environment are well known and include putative viviparity as the reproductive strategy along to the presence of several skeletal characters such as a long, laterally compressed tail, long limbs, particularly the foot larger than the manus, pachyostotic bones, mainly in the ribs, and osteosclerosis in the humerus. They also possessed non-coosified girdle bones and incompletely ossified epiphyses, although there could be an early fusion of the front girdle bones to form the scapulocoracoid in some specimens. Some of these features, however, are shared by most of the basal tetrapods which are considered as semiaquatic and even terrestrial. The study of vertebral column and limbs provides essential clues about the locomotor system and the lifestyle of early amniotes. In this study, we have found that the variation of the vertebral centrum length along the axial skeleton of Mesosaurus tenuidens fits better with a semi-aquatic morphometric pattern, as shown by comparisons with other extinct and extant taxa. Whereas well-preserved mesosaur skeletons are mostly represented by juveniles and young adults that inhabited aquatic environments, more mature individuals might hypothetically have spent time on land. This is tentatively pointed out by taphonomic factors such as the scarce representation and poor preservation of remains of mature individuals in the fossiliferous levels, and also by anatomy of the appendicular bones, and particularly the strongly ossified epiphyses and tarsus.

Highlights

  • We examined a total of 50 skeletons: 40 of Mesosaurus tenuidens, four Hovasaurus boulei, two Thadeosaurus colcanapi, and four Claudiosaurus germaini (Figure 1)

  • Felice and Angielczyk (2014) applied morphometric studies including vertebral length profiles to several extinct and extant taxa and Ophiacodon and other early synapsids fell in the semi-aquatic category as they display a morphometric profile similar to most extant semi-aquatic reptiles and mammals

  • Another work that inquired into the lifestyle of Ophiacodon through a study of bone microanatomy (Germain and Laurin, 2005) found evidence supporting a semi-aquatic to terrestrial pattern

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Mesosaurs are widely thought to represent the earliest fully aquatic amniotes (MacGregor, 1908; Romer, 1966; Araújo, 1976; Oelofsen, 1981; Carroll, 1982; Laurin and Reisz, 1995; Modesto, 1996, 2006, 2010; Mazin, 2001; Canoville and Laurin, 2010; Villamil et al, 2015) They possessed a laterally compressed long tail, webbed limbs, long digits, a large foot (much larger than the manus), and nares placed far posteriorly from the tip of the snout, close to the eyes and fairly dorsal (MacGregor, 1908; von Huene, 1941; Piñeiro et al, 2016). Mesosaurs did not possess certain morphological adaptations present in ichthyosaurs, mosasaurs and plesiosaurs, such as reduction of the limbs, polydactyly, and polyphalangy, which are clear adaptations to live in open marine environments (Massare, 1988)

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.