Am. Baez et al., The earliest known pipoid frog from South America: a new genus from the Middle Cretaceous of Argentina, J VERTEBR P, 20(3), 2000, pp. 490-500
Vertebrate remains from the Late Albian-Early Cenomanian Candeleros Formati
on of northwestern Patagonia include those of a pipoid frog, which is descr
ibed herein. The fossils consist of partially articulated and disarticulate
d elements. some of them badly broken, that are mostly exposed in ventral a
spect. The description is based on one incomplete skeleton that presumably
belongs to a single individual; this specimen possesses a combination of ch
aracter states not present in other known non-palaeobatrachid pipimorph tax
a and is identified here as a new genus and species. Avitabatrachus uliana.
The species is moderately small (estimated snout-vent length ca. 35 mm) an
d shares with Pipidae conch-like squamosals, deeply excavated prootics to f
orm channels for the Eustachian tubes, articulations for the lower jaws at
the anterolateral corners of otic capsules, and fused sacrum and urostyle.
Avitabatrachus possesses at least eight presacral vertebrae, the first two
of which are fused, with flat, opisthocoelous centra. Unique features of th
is taxon are the presence of parasagittal flanges along the posterior halve
s of the otic capsules and the wide transverse processes of the posterior p
resacral vertebrae, which are only slightly anteriorly directed. Preliminar
y comparisons with other fossil pipoid taxa in the context of recent parsim
ony analyses suggest that it is the sister taxon of Pipidae. However, this
phylogenetic placement of the new taxon should be corroborated in a future
rigorous analysis that should include some putative stem pipid taxa that cu
rrently are being restudied.