Batropetes
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''Batropetes'' is an extinct genus of brachystelechid recumbirostran " microsaur". ''Batropetes'' lived during the Sakmarian stage of the
Early Permian 01 or '01 may refer to: * The year 2001, or any year ending with 01 * The month of January * 1 (number) Music * '01 (Richard Müller album), 01'' (Richard Müller album), 2001 * 01 (Son of Dave album), ''01'' (Son of Dave album), 2000 * 01 (Urban ...
. Fossils attributable to the type species ''B. fritschi'' have been collected from the town of
Freital Freital is a town in the district of Sächsische Schweiz-Osterzgebirge in Saxony, Germany. The town is situated on a small river, the Weißeritz, and is southwest of Dresden. Geography Freital is located southwest of Dresden in the Döhlen Ba ...
in Saxony, Germany, near the city of Dresden. Additional material has been found from the Saar-Nahe Basin in southwestern Germany and has been assigned to three additional species: ''B. niederkirchensis'', ''B. palatinus'', and ''B. appelensis''.


Description

''Batropetes'' is small and short-bodied for a microsaur. Its average total body length was about . The orbits are large and the skull is short. ''Batropetes'' possesses scales on its underside that are similar to those of reptiles. ''Batropetes'' is distinguished from ''
Carrolla ''Carrolla'' is an extinct genus of brachystelechid 'microsaur' that lived in the Lower Permian in North America. It was named in 1986 by American paleontologists Wann Langston and Everett Olson. The type species, ''Carrolla craddocki'', is th ...
'', another brachystelechid microsaur, by the presence of three cusps on the premaxillary and anterior dentary teeth. In ''Carrolla'', there are only two cusps. Additional diagnostic features seen in ''Batropetes'' include a supraoccipital bone that is not fused to the
otic capsule The bony labyrinth (also osseous labyrinth or otic capsule) is the rigid, bony outer wall of the inner ear in the temporal bone. It consists of three parts: the vestibule, semicircular canals, and cochlea. These are cavities hollowed out of the s ...
, the presence of a retroarticular process (a projection at the back of the lower jaw), and two proximal bones in the tarsus.


Classification

The first known material now attributed to the genus ''Batropetes'' was originally referred to the genus ''
Hyloplesion ''Hyloplesion'' is an extinct genus of microbrachomorph microsaur. It is the type and only genus within the family Hyloplesiontidae. Fossils have been found from the Czech Republic near the towns of Plzeň, Nýřany, and Třemošná, and da ...
'' in 1882. Several specimens from Freital were described under the name ''Hyloplesion Fritschi'' as small non-
labyrinthodonts "Labyrinthodontia" (Greek, 'maze-toothed') is an informal grouping of extinct predatory amphibians which were major components of ecosystems in the late Paleozoic and early Mesozoic eras (about 390 to 150 million years ago). Traditionally consi ...
. Three years later, the specimens originally referred to as ''Hyloplesion Fritschi'' were reassigned by
Carl Hermann Credner Carl Hermann Georg Credner (1 October 1841 – 21 July 1913) was a German earth scientist and the son of Carl Friedrich Heinrich Credner. Biography Credner was born at Gotha, educated at Breslau and Göttingen, and took the degree of Ph.D. at ...
to the genus '' Hylonomus'' under the name ''Hylonomus fritschia''. Newly discovered specimens of other forms from the same locality led Credner to believe that two taxa existed. He named one, an amphibian, ''Hylonomus geinitzi'', and the other, a reptile, ''Petrobates truncatus''. Later preparation of the material examined by Credner through a technique of removing the soft bone from the surrounding matrix mechanically and casting the cavities in liquid latex has revealed more anatomical detail suggesting that three taxa were present in Freital, not two. A specimen previously referred to ''Petrobates truncatus'' was first considered by
Robert L. Carroll Robert "Bob" Lynn Carroll (May 5, 1938 – April 8, 2020) was an American–Canadian vertebrate paleontologist who specialised in Paleozoic and Mesozoic amphibians and reptiles. Biography Carroll was an only child and grew up on a farm near ...
and
Pamela Gaskill Pamela may refer to: *''Pamela; or, Virtue Rewarded'', a novel written by Samuel Richardson in 1740 *Pamela (name), a given name and, rarely, a surname *Pamela Spence, a Turkish pop-rock singer. Known as her stage name "Pamela" * MSC ''Pamela'', ...
in 1978 to be a microsaur rather than a reptile. It was considered distinct from ''Petrobates'', then considered a captorhinomorph, based only on the structure of the atlas. Of the three species represented in Frietal, ''Hylonomus geinitzi'', as described by Credner, has since been reassigned to the microsaur genus '' Saxonerpeton'', and ''Petrobates truncatus'' was designated as ''Batropetes truncatus'' by Carroll and Gaskill in 1971. Carroll and Gaskill still referred to ''B. truncatus'' as a captorhinomorph reptile. Carroll and Gaskill described a new microsaur in 1978 from Frietal, which they called ''Brachystelechus fritschi''. It was noted that the skull of ''Brachystelechus'' bore a striking resemblance to that of ''Batropetes'', which was considered to be unrelated. It differed from ''Batropetes'' in that it possessed an internarial bone which was not seen in known specimens of ''Batropetes''. A newly discovered specimen of microsaur from the Saar-Nahe district in southwestern Germany has confirmed that ''Brachystelechus'' and ''Batropetes'' represent the same species. The characters that previously distinguished the two genera from one another are all found in one specimen, known as SMNS 55884, housed in the
Staatliches Museum für Naturkunde Stuttgart The State Museum of Natural History Stuttgart (german: Staatliches Museum für Naturkunde Stuttgart), abbreviated SMNS, is one of the two state of Baden-Württemberg's natural history museums. Together with the State Museum of Natural History ...
. This a complete specimen preserved in ventral view and consisting of a part and counterpart. The skull roof was examined by excavating the matrix from the top of the block and exposing more anatomical features. The occipital condyle in SMNS 55884, not noticeable in the specimen of ''Brachystelechus'', clearly indicates that it is a microsaur rather than a captorhinomorph reptile. An interfrontal bone is seen in material once referred to ''Brachystelechus'' but not in any material known from specimens previously attributed to ''Batropetes''. This may be a result of poor preservation, or perhaps intraspecific variation. The parietals of the specimen are wide and the skull is short, both of which are features that associate it with the North American genera ''
Carrolla ''Carrolla'' is an extinct genus of brachystelechid 'microsaur' that lived in the Lower Permian in North America. It was named in 1986 by American paleontologists Wann Langston and Everett Olson. The type species, ''Carrolla craddocki'', is th ...
'' and ''
Quasicaecilia ''Quasicaecilia'' is an extinct genus of microsaur. It is known from the Early Permian of Texas in the United States. A single specimen is known, collected from the Texas Permian redbeds by Charles Hazelius Sternberg in 1917. It was originally id ...
''. On the basis of these and other similarities, Carroll, who described the new material in 1991, constructed a new microbrachomorph family called the Brachystelechidae to include ''Batropetes'', ''Carrolla'', and ''Quasicaecilia''. A 2013 study of ''Batropetes'' erected a new species, ''Batropetes niederkirchensis'', for specimen SMNS 55884. SMNS 55884 was noted to differ from the type specimen of ''B. fritschi'' in the number of presacral vertebrae, the width between the eye sockets, the shape of the prefrontal, postorbital, and scapulocoracoid bones, and the position of the obturator foramen in the hips. Two additional species, ''B. appelensis'' and ''B. palatinus'', were named in 2015 on the basis of new material found from the Saar-Nahe Basin. During the 2010's recumbirostran microsaurs, including brachystelechids, were increasingly considered to be early diverging
sauropsids Sauropsida ("lizard faces") is a clade of amniotes, broadly equivalent to the class Reptilia. Sauropsida is the sister taxon to Synapsida, the other clade of amniotes which includes mammals as its only modern representatives. Although early synap ...
, rather than
reptiliomorphs Reptiliomorpha (meaning reptile-shaped; in PhyloCode known as ''Pan-Amniota'') is a clade containing the amniotes and those tetrapods that share a more recent common ancestor with amniotes than with living amphibians (lissamphibians). It was defi ...
.


Notes

  1. In European lithostratigraphy this is known as the Rotliegend.
  2. ''Hylonomus'' is now known to be a genus of early reptile within the family Protorothyrididae.


References


External links


''Batropetes''
in the Paleobiology Database {{Taxonbar, from=Q2891634 Microsauria Permian amphibians of Europe Fossil taxa described in 1971