TAXONOMIC STATUS OF THE EARLY PERMIAN HELODECTES PARIDENS COPE (DIADECTIDAE) WITH DISCUSSION OF OCCLUSION OF DIADECTID MARGINAL DENTITIONS

Citation
Ds. Berman et al., TAXONOMIC STATUS OF THE EARLY PERMIAN HELODECTES PARIDENS COPE (DIADECTIDAE) WITH DISCUSSION OF OCCLUSION OF DIADECTID MARGINAL DENTITIONS, Annals of the Carnegie Museum, 67(2), 1998, pp. 181-196
Citations number
12
Categorie Soggetti
Multidisciplinary Sciences
ISSN journal
00974463
Volume
67
Issue
2
Year of publication
1998
Pages
181 - 196
Database
ISI
SICI code
0097-4463(1998)67:2<181:TSOTEP>2.0.ZU;2-F
Abstract
Helodectes paridens Cope (1880) is a problematic Early Permian taxon f rom Texas that has been considered variously as a diadectid or captorh inid, or simply indeterminate. It was based on a poorly preserved jaw and adjoining elements of the left side of a small skull that was beli eved to possess a double row of marginal teeth. Thorough preparation o f the holotype reveals that one row represents a normal complement of rooted premaxillary and maxillary teeth and the other a row of crowns derived from the opposing teeth of the absent dentary. There are no de tectable differences from the commonly encountered Diadectes of the sa me age, and Helodectes should be regarded as a junior synonym of that genus. As the holotype of H. paridens exhibits no features on which to base specific identity, it is referred to as Diadectes sp. The same i nterpretation undoubtedly applies to the double row of premaxillary-ma xillary marginal teeth in the lost and only known specimen of the equa lly small holotype of H. isaaci Cope (1880) from the same locality as H. paridens. A second example of Helodectes-like dental preservation i s described in the opposing upper and lower jaw elements in a very sma ll Diadectes specimen from the Early Permian of Texas. The double-toot hed row preservation of the marginal teeth in these specimens prompts discussion of aspects of the occlusion of the cheek teeth in Diadectes and those in the closely related Late Pennsylvanian Desmatodon. It is speculated that, in addition to occlusion between the upper and lower cheek teeth, mastication also occurred through contact between the ma xillary cheek teeth and the inner surface of the parapet of the dentar y, and between the cheek teeth of the dentary and the ventral surface of the secondary palatal shelf of the palatine. Changes in the pattern of attrition indicate that with increased molarization the occlusion between the upper and lower cheek teeth shifted from a strictly side-t o-side contact in extremely small juveniles to a strictly dorsoventral , vertical-alignment contact between the upper surfaces of the crowns in adults. In the adult pattern of occlusion the upper and lower cheek -tooth series were only partially aligned dorsoventrally, and it is as sumed that the labial margin of the upper series and the lingual margi n of the lower series occluded with the inner surface of the dentary p arapet and the ventral surface of the secondary palatal shelf of the p alatine, respectively. These changes in the molarization and occlusion from extremely small juveniles to adults may have been accompanied by a shift in diet.