Neothalattosuchia, Young, Wilberg, Johnson, Herrera, Brandalise, Andrade, Brignon, Sachs, Abel, Foffa, Fernández, Vignaud, Cowgill & Brusatte, 2024

Young, Mark T., Wilberg, Eric W., Johnson, Michela M., Herrera, Yanina, Brandalise, Marco de Andrade, Brignon, Arnaud, Sachs, Sven, Abel, Pascal, Foffa, Davide, Fernández, Marta S., Vignaud, Patrick, Cowgill, Thomas & Brusatte, Stephen L., 2024, The history, systematics, and nomenclature of Thalattosuchia (Archosauria: Crocodylomorpha), Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 200 (2), pp. 547-617 : 587-590

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1093/zoolinnean/zlad165

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:1EEF0D52-180B-4D3D-AB95-91AF3091E272

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11354904

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D08506-FF98-7314-7AE1-0A2F0F02FC8C

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Neothalattosuchia
status

new clade name

Neothalattosuchia , new clade name (PhyloCode)

RegNum registration number 1014.

Etymology

‘New sea crocodiles’. Neo - from the Ancient Greek (νέος, néos) for young or new. Thalatto - is from the classical Ancient Greek (θᾰ́λᾰ́ττᾰ́, thálatta) for sea. Suchus is the Neo-Latinized form of the Greek Soukhos (σοῦΧος), which appears to have been the name of an individual tamed crocodile that lived in Arsinoite nome, in Ancient Egypt ( Larcher 1844: 286). The suffix - suchus is today used to refer to crocodiles, crocodylian relatives, or crocodylian analogues. The Neo-Latin suffix - ia denotes an abstract noun of feminine grammatical gender.

Geological range

Early Jurassic (Hettangian–Sinemurian) to Early Cretaceous (earliest Aptian) ( von Huene and Maubeuge 1952, 1954, Gasparini 1985, Godefroit 1994, Gasparini et al. 2000, Chiarenza et al. 2015, Sachs et al. 2020, Hicham et al. 2023).

PhyloCode phylogenetic definition

The smallest clade within Thalattosuchia containing Macrospondylus bollensis ( Jäger 1828) , Platysuchus multiscrobiculatus ( Berckhemer 1929) , Pelagosaurus typus Bronn 1842 and Thalattosuchus superciliosus (Blainville in Eudes-Deslongchamps 1852).

Reference phylogeny

Fig. 3 View Figure 3 .

PhyloCode diagnostic apomorphies

Crocodylomorphs with the following unique combination of characters (6): antorbital cavity much smaller than the orbit in terms of area (173.0) and length (174.0); trigeminal fossa is well developed posteriorly to the fenestra (i.e. fossa very broadly exposed on the quadrate) (438.1); presence of two distinct foramina within the trigeminal fossa (440.1); basioccipital tuberosities are large (459.1); the tibiae are evidently shorter than the femora (with some Toarcian teleosauroid species falling in states 1 and 2) (809.2).

Composition

Teleosauroidea (which is composed of Machimosauridae and Teleosauridae ) and Metriorhynchoidea (successively comprising of Pelagosaurus , Teleidosaurus , Magyarosuchus , Opisuchus , Eoneustes , Zoneait , and Metriorhynchidae ).

Comments

Authorship: This is a new nomen.

Prior phylogenetic definition: This clade has never been phylogenetically defined.

Content: This clade is what is normally ‘pictured’ as Thalattosuchia —containing the two large radiations Teleosauroidea and Metriorhynchoidea . The chosen specifiers ensure that the major thalattosuchian radiations are represented (e.g. Teleosauridae , Machimosauridae , and Metriorhynchidae ), as well as ‘transitional forms’ such as Pelagosaurus typus. Under this definition, only Turnersuchus hingleyae and Plagiophthalmosuchus gracilirostris ( Fig. 20 View Figure 20 ) fall outside of Neothalattosuchia . Prior to our analyses, only Turnersuchus hingleyae from the Pliensbachian had been recovered as an early diverging thalattosuchian ( Wilberg et al. 2023).

Note: As Neothalattosuchia is above the family-group, only Articles 1–4, 7–10, 11.1–11.3, 14, 27, 28, and 32.5.2.5 of the Zoological Code apply (as per Article 1.2.2).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Reptilia

Order

Crocodylia

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