Piñeiro, G., Ramos, A., and C. Marsicano. 2012. A rhinesuchid-like temnospondyl from the Permo-Triassic of
Uruguay. Compte Rendus Palevol 11:65-78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.crpv.2011.07.007
Abstract - A new temnospondyl species, Arachana nigra, from the
Permo-Triassic Buena Vista Formation of Uruguay is described. The holotypic and
only known specimen consists of an almost complete skull lacking most of the
snout, the tabular horns and the posterolateral corners of the skull table. As
with other specimens from the same unit, Arachana shows a transitional
morphology. It shares several characters with rhinesuchids, such as the large
size and the general shape of the skull, orbits positioned slightly posterior to
the skull roof mid-length, a coarsely pitted dermal ornamentation lacking
pustules, and a smoothly convex cheek contour. The palatal ramus of the
pterygoid suturing with the vomer, and excluding the palatine and ectopterygoid
from the margin of the interpterygoid vacuity, and the presence of a small
basioccipital, visible in both occipital and ventral view, also resemble the
conditions found in rhinesuchids and other basal temnospondyls. Other characters
present in Arachana, however, are commonly found in lydekkerinids, but
are absent in almost all rhinesuchids: supratemporal excluded from otic notch;
supraorbital and infraorbital sensory sulci encroaching the lacrimal, although
lacking a step-like lacrimal flexure; otic notch not deeply incised;
post-temporal fenestra large and rounded; occipital condyles well-separated from
each other; palatine tooth row behind the palatine tusk reduced; pterygoid
corpus slightly ornamented; and presence of an interorbital depression. This
combination of primitive and derived characters is consistently present in most
components of the Buena Vista fauna, which could thus be transitional between
typical Permian and Triassic tetrapod communities found elsewhere. The location
of the PTB in the Uruguayan sequence is controversial, mainly due to the lack of
clear faunal correlations with other well-known sequences, such as those of
southern Africa and Russia. Moreover, the mosaic-like character combinations in
most of the recorded tetrapods ally them to both Triassic and Paleozoic groups,
and this has complicated even more the possibility of age assignment.
Transitional faunas associated with the PTB, such as the Russian Uppermost
Permian faunas, could be equivalent to the unique Colonia Orozco fauna. If true,
this scenario will substantially change estimates about survivorship rates,
suggesting a speciation rate increase in temnospondyls after the
Permian-Triassic event. Based on taxonomic, phylogenetic, and geochronologic
data, the Buena Vista fauna allows us to quantify faunal turnover across the PTB
and in the aftermath of the end Permian extinction event.
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