Dissorophoidea

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Dissorophoidea
Temporal range:
Ma
Probable descendant taxon Lissamphibia survives to present.[1]
Skeleton of
Field Museum
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Order: Temnospondyli
Suborder: Euskelia
Superfamily: Dissorophoidea
Bolt, 1969
Subgroups

See text.

Dissorophoidea is a

Euramerica, and continued through to the Late Permian and the Early Triassic of Gondwana. They are distinguished by various details of the skull,[2]
and many species seem to have been well adapted for life on land.

Dissorophoid diversity was highest in the Permian; some of the more diverse families within the group include Dissorophidae (toad-like amphibians with armored scutes along their backbone), Trematopidae (terrestrial predators with large triangular skulls), and Branchiosauridae (small neotenic amphibians with large external gills). The small Permo-Carboniferous Micromelerpetontidae are another example of neotenic dissorophoids. Many small dissorophoids with short rounded skulls were historically known as "amphibamids"; in 2018, the name Amphibamiformes was erected for a clade equivalent to the broad historical definition of "Amphibamidae".[3]

Since 2008, a consensus of early amphibian researchers consider Lissamphibia (modern amphibians) to be part of this clade. There is a large degree of similarity between lissamphibians (for which the oldest known fossils are Early Triassic) and certain Early Permian amphibamiforms, such as Gerobatrachus and Doleserpeton.[1][4][3][5] A few authors still dispute affinities between dissorophoids and lissamphibians.[6][7]

Taxonomy

Phylogeny

An extensive phylogenetic analysis of dissorophoids conducted in 2016 and 2018 found that the families Dissorophidae and Trematopidae are more closely related to each other than either is to the family Amphibamidae. Following a 2008 study, the Dissorophidae-Trematopidae clade was called Olsoniformes. Below is the cladogram from the 2018 analysis:[3]

Dissorophoidea

References

References

  1. ^ a b Pérez-Ben, C.M. Schoch, R.R. & Báez, A.M. (2018) Miniaturization and morphological evolution in Paleozoic relatives of living amphibians: a quantitative approach. Paleobiology.
  2. apomorphies
    )
  3. ^ a b c d Schoch, R.R. (2018) The putative lissamphibian stem-group: phylogeny and evolution of the dissorophoid temnospondyls. Journal of Paleontology. Online edition. doi:10.1017/jpa.2018.67.
  4. ^ Anderson, J.S. (2008) Focal review: the origin(s) of modern amphibians: Evolutionary Biology, v. 35, p. 231–247.
  5. ISSN 1435-1943
    .
  6. .
  7. .

External links