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Oldest southern sauropterygian reveals early marine reptile globalization. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Sauropterygians were a group of marine reptiles that lived for about 180 million years during the Mesozoic era.
  • Their early evolution has primarily been studied in the Northern Hemisphere, with movements toward the Southern Hemisphere expected before the Middle Triassic.
  • The discovery of a nothosaur from Middle Triassic New Zealand indicates a surprising dispersal pattern from the Northern Tethys region, which aligns with the adaptive expansion of sauropterygians following the end-Permian mass extinction.

Article Abstract

Sauropterygians were the stratigraphically longest-ranging clade of Mesozoic marine reptiles with a global fossil record spanning ∼180 million years. However, their early evolution has only been known from what is now the Northern Hemisphere, extending across the northern and trans-equatorial western margins of the Tethys paleo-ocean after the late-Early Triassic (late Olenekian, ∼248.8 million years [Ma] ago), and via possible trans-Arctic migration to the Eastern Panthalassa super-ocean prior to the earliest Middle Triassic (Olenekian-earliest Anisian, ∼247 Ma). Here, we describe the geologically oldest sea-going reptile from the Southern Hemisphere - a nothosaur (basal sauropterygian) from the Middle Triassic (Anisian, after ∼246 Ma) of New Zealand. Time-scaled ancestral range estimations thus reveal an unexpected circum-Gondwanan high-paleolatitude (>60° S) dispersal from a northern Tethyan origination center. This coincides with the adaptive diversification of sauropterygians after the end-Permian mass extinction and suggests that rapid globalization accompanied their initial radiation in the earliest Mesozoic.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2024.03.035DOI Listing

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