Origin and early evolution of the amniote occiput

Authors
Citation
Ds. Berman, Origin and early evolution of the amniote occiput, J PALEONTOL, 74(5), 2000, pp. 938-956
Citations number
81
Categorie Soggetti
Earth Sciences
Journal title
JOURNAL OF PALEONTOLOGY
ISSN journal
00223360 → ACNP
Volume
74
Issue
5
Year of publication
2000
Pages
938 - 956
Database
ISI
SICI code
0022-3360(200009)74:5<938:OAEEOT>2.0.ZU;2-H
Abstract
Reinterpretation of cranial materials of the diadectomorphs Limnoscelis and Diadectes has prompted a reconsideration of the origin and early evolution of the amniote occiput. The basic approach is a phylogenetic study of majo r groups of Palcozoic tetrapods based on the occiput and closely associated elements of the skull roof. A lack of adequate anatomical data has forced the elimination of only a few relevant higher-level taxa from consideration , and, using Acanthostega as the reference outgroup, a cladistic analysis o f the interrelationships of the Lepospondyli, Temnospondyli, Seymouriamorph a, Baphetidae (=Loxommatidae), Anthracosauria, Diadectomorpha, Synapsida, a nd Reptilia has produced the following results: 1) the ingroup taxa exhibit a basal dichotomy in which one division consists of the unresolved relatio nships of Lepospondyli, Temnospondyli, and Seymouriamorpha; 2) the pattern of relationships of the second division of the ingroup taxa is a series of nested clades, terminating with the Diadectomorpha and Synapsida as sister taxa sharing a more recent common ancestor than either does with Reptilia. This relationship requires assignment of Diadectomorpha to Amniota; and 3) the Anthracosauria and Baphetidae are progressively more distant clades or sister taxa. On the basis of the cladistic analysis, the attainment of the amniote occiput is described as passing through four morphological grades o f organization. Each grade of the series is characterized by a set of deriv ed character states that defines the progressively more-derived nodes and f rom which branch a clade containing the unresolved trichotomy of Lepospondy li, Temnospondyli, and Seymouriamorpha; the Baphetidae clade; the Anthracos auria clade; and the Diadectomorpha+Synapsida and Reptilia clades, respecti vely.