Uteodon aphanoecetes Carpenter & Wilson, 2008

Mcdonald, Andrew T., 2011, The taxonomy of species assigned to Camptosaurus (Dinosauria: Ornithopoda), Zootaxa 2783, pp. 52-68 : 56-59

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.200811

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6185213

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E80287E9-B114-FFFD-CDB9-5449FB43FDA9

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Uteodon aphanoecetes Carpenter & Wilson, 2008
status

comb. nov.

Uteodon aphanoecetes Carpenter & Wilson, 2008 , comb. nov.

2008 Camptosaurus aphanoecetes Carpenter & Wilson , p. 232.

Holotype. CM 11337, nearly complete postcranium.

Paratypes. CM 15780, 41689, 79050; DINO 556, 1030, 1032.

Referred material. Disarticulated elements held in CM and DINO collections ( Carpenter & Wilson 2008).

Generic etymology. Ute (pronounced “yewt”) is the name of a Native American people who inhabit northeastern Utah, in the vicinity of Dinosaur National Monument. Odon comes from the transliterated Greek meaning “tooth”, and is a common root in the generic names of basal iguanodonts. The gender of the generic name is masculine.

Locality and horizon. Carnegie Quarry at Dinosaur National Monument, Uintah County, Utah; Brushy Basin Member of the Morrison Formation, lower–middle Tithonian ( Kowallis et al. 1998).

Generic diagnosis. As for the species by monotypy.

Specific diagnosis. Basal styracosternan distinguished by a single autapomorphy: occipital condyle projects farther ventrally than the basal tubera ( Fig. 7 View FIGURE 7 ). Also distinguished from all other iguanodontians except Cumnoria prestwichii by the following unique combination of characters: scapula with acromion process that is convex along its cranial margin ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 B), convex dorsal margin of scapula ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 C), convex dorsal margin of ilium, dorsal margin of ilium thickens mediolaterally towards M. iliocaudalis platform, postacetabular process of ilium tapers to a point with break in slope along dorsal margin ( Fig. 6 View FIGURE 6 A), distal end of ischium forms cranially expanded boot.

Remarks. The holotype of Uteodon aphanoecetes , CM 11337, was originally referred to Camptosaurus medius ” (= C. dispar ) by Gilmore (1925). Carpenter & Wilson (2008) reassessed the specimen and found that it differed sufficiently from specimens of C. dispar to warrant the creation of the new species C. aphanoecetes . The new phylogenetic analysis supports the distinction of Uteodon aphanoecetes from C. dispar , but does not recover a monophyletic Camptosaurus as conceived by Carpenter & Wilson (2008). Instead, Uteodon aphanoecetes and Cumnoria prestwichii (see below) are more derived than C. dispar in the reduced consensus tree and are therefore the most basal members of Styracosterna, which is defined as those species more closely related to Parasaurolophus walkeri than to Camptosaurus dispar ( Sereno 2005) ( Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 ). Furthermore, Uteodon is also found to be more derived than C. dispar in the agreement subtree ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 ). For the analysis, Uteodon aphanoecetes was coded based upon the holotype, paratypes, and referred specimens designated by Carpenter & Wilson (2008). Only specimens in the CM collection could be examined firsthand.

Uteodon aphanoecetes and Cumnoria prestwichii are quite similar to each other and different from Camptosaurus dispar . The holotype skeletons of Uteodon and Cumnoria both exhibit scapulae with convex dorsal margins, whereas scapulae of Camptosaurus dispar are straight or somewhat concave along their dorsal margins (e.g., USNM 2210, 4282, 5473, 5954, 5955; YPM 8611) ( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3 ). Furthermore, as noted above, the ilia of Cumnoria and Uteodon exhibit convex dorsal margins ( Fig. 6 View FIGURE 6 ), similar to some more derived iguanodonts such as Iguanodon bernissartensis (IRSNB 1534) and Equijubus normani ( You et al. 2003), but different from the straight dorsal margin of the ilium of Camptosaurus dispar ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 ). Furthermore, Uteodon possesses an autapomorphy in the partial braincase of paratype specimen CM 15780: the occipital condyle projects far ventrally relative to the basal tubera. This condition differs from the basioccipitals of Camptosaurus dispar (USNM 5473, 5996, 5997; YPM 1856A, 1880) and Cumnoria (OXFUM J.3303), in which the basal tubera protrude farther ventrally than the occipital condyle ( Fig. 7 View FIGURE 7 ).

The results of the phylogenetic analysis and the morphological differences explicated above strongly suggest that Uteodon aphanoecetes and Cumnoria prestwichii should not be considered congeneric with Camptosaurus dispar ; Uteodon and Cumnoria are recovered as basal styracosternans more derived than Camptosaurus dispar . It is thus a straightforward matter to reinstate the existing genus Cumnoria ( Seeley 1888) for “ Camptosaurus prestwichii (see below). However, a more difficult dilemma is the status of “ Camptosaurus aphanoecetes , which does not have a pre-existing genus into which it can be conveniently placed. As described above, this species is very similar to Cumnoria prestwichii , distinguished only by a single autapomorphy of the braincase. Thus, the possible taxonomic revision that immediately arises is to create the new combination Cumnoria aphanoecetes . However, such a move presupposes that future phylogenetic analyses and discoveries will find a sister-taxa relationship of Cumnoria prestwichii and “ Camptosaurus aphanoecetes . The topologies presented herein could change with additional new taxa and new material, most especially additional cranial elements of “ Camptosaurus aphanoecetes (in addition to the known right dentary DINO 556 and partial braincase of CM 15780). It is this labile nature of the phylogeny that prompts the creation of the new genus and combination Uteodon aphanoecetes . This species can thus occupy any position relative to Cumnoria prestwichii and Camptosaurus dispar in future analyses without necessitating still another taxonomic reassignment. From the standpoint of taxonomic stability, giving Uteodon aphanoecetes its own new genus is preferable to committing it to the genus Cumnoria.

DINO

Dinosaur National Monument

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Reptilia

Order

Ornithischia

Family

Hadrosauridae

Genus

Uteodon

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF