Secodontosaurus
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''Secodontosaurus'' (meaning "cutting-tooth lizard") is an
extinct Extinction is the termination of a kind of organism or of a group of kinds (taxon), usually a species. The moment of extinction is generally considered to be the death of the last individual of the species, although the capacity to breed and ...
genus Genus ( plural genera ) is a taxonomic rank used in the biological classification of extant taxon, living and fossil organisms as well as Virus classification#ICTV classification, viruses. In the hierarchy of biological classification, genus com ...
of "
pelycosaur Pelycosaur ( ) is an older term for basal or primitive Late Paleozoic synapsids, excluding the therapsids and their descendants. Previously, the term ''mammal-like reptile'' had been used, and pelycosaur was considered an order, but this is no ...
"
synapsid Synapsids + (, 'arch') > () "having a fused arch"; synonymous with ''theropsids'' (Greek, "beast-face") are one of the two major groups of animals that evolved from basal amniotes, the other being the sauropsids, the group that includes reptil ...
s that lived from between about 285 to 272 million years ago during 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 ...
. Like the well known ''
Dimetrodon ''Dimetrodon'' ( or ,) meaning "two measures of teeth,” is an extinct genus of non-mammalian synapsid that lived during the Cisuralian (Early Permian), around 295–272 million years ago (Mya). It is a member of the family Sphenacodontid ...
'', ''Secodontosaurus'' is a
carnivorous A carnivore , or meat-eater (Latin, ''caro'', genitive ''carnis'', meaning meat or "flesh" and ''vorare'' meaning "to devour"), is an animal or plant whose food and energy requirements derive from animal tissues (mainly muscle, fat and other sof ...
member of the
Eupelycosauria Eupelycosauria is a large clade of animals characterized by the unique shape of their skull, encompassing all mammals and their closest extinct relatives. They first appeared 308million years ago during the Early Pennsylvanian epoch, with the fo ...
family
Sphenacodontidae Sphenacodontidae (Greek: "wedge point tooth family") is an extinct family of small to large, advanced, carnivorous, Late Pennsylvanian to middle Permian pelycosaurs. The most recent one, ''Dimetrodon angelensis'', is from the late Kungurian or e ...
and has a similar tall dorsal sail. However, its skull is long, low, and narrow, with slender jaws that have teeth that are very similar in size and shape—unlike the shorter, deep skull of ''Dimetrodon'' ("two-measure tooth"), which has large, prominent canine-like teeth in front and smaller slicing teeth further back in its jaws. Its unusual long, narrow jaws suggest that ''Secodontosaurus'' may have been specialized for catching fish or for hunting prey that lived or hid in burrows or crevices. Although no complete skeletons are currently known, ''Secodontosaurus'' likely ranged from about in length, weighing up to . Fossils of ''Secodontosaurus'' have been found in
Texas Texas (, ; Spanish language, Spanish: ''Texas'', ''Tejas'') is a state in the South Central United States, South Central region of the United States. At 268,596 square miles (695,662 km2), and with more than 29.1 million residents in 2 ...
in
North America North America is a continent in the Northern Hemisphere and almost entirely within the Western Hemisphere. It is bordered to the north by the Arctic Ocean, to the east by the Atlantic Ocean, to the southeast by South America and the Car ...
in the Wichita and the Clear Fork groups of Early Permian formations. In recent years, teams from the
Houston Museum of Natural Science The Houston Museum of Natural Science (abbreviated as HMNS) is a natural history museum located on the northern border of Hermann Park in Houston, Texas, United States. The museum was established in 1909 by the Houston Museum and Scientific Soc ...
have recovered remains in the Clear Fork Red Beds of North Texas that appear to be new specimens of ''Secodontosaurus''. These discoveries are mentioned in online blogs but so far have not been formally described. The name ''Secodontosaurus'' comes from
Latin Latin (, or , ) is a classical language belonging to the Italic branch of the Indo-European languages. Latin was originally a dialect spoken in the lower Tiber area (then known as Latium) around present-day Rome, but through the power of the ...
('to cut') +
Greek Greek may refer to: Greece Anything of, from, or related to Greece, a country in Southern Europe: *Greeks, an ethnic group. *Greek language, a branch of the Indo-European language family. **Proto-Greek language, the assumed last common ancestor ...
, (, , 'tooth') + Greek (, 'lizard') and is based on the anatomical term "secodont" for teeth with cutting edges designed to tear or slice flesh. Paleontologist
Robert Bakker Robert Thomas Bakker (born March 24, 1945) is an American paleontologist who helped reshape modern theories about dinosaurs, particularly by adding support to the theory that some dinosaurs were endothermic (warm-blooded). Along with his mentor J ...
has dubbed ''Secodontosaurus'' the "fox-faced finback" after its long jaws.


Description

A number of partial fossil remains of ''Secodontosaurus'' have been identified from its characteristic long skull and jaws. The postcranial skeletal material from different individuals includes parts of the backbone with clear evidence of a tall sail very similar to that of ''
Dimetrodon ''Dimetrodon'' ( or ,) meaning "two measures of teeth,” is an extinct genus of non-mammalian synapsid that lived during the Cisuralian (Early Permian), around 295–272 million years ago (Mya). It is a member of the family Sphenacodontid ...
''. The limbs and tail are incomplete but probably resembled those of ''Dimetrodon'' as well. Like ''Dimetrodon'', ''Secodontosaurus'' would have had a short neck, robust body, short limbs, and a long tail. In light of such similarities, some skeletal remains with missing or fragmentary skulls that were previously identified as ''Dimetrodon'' may in fact belong to ''Secodontosaurus''. A key noncranial difference can be found in the axis neck vertebra, which has a tall and broad neural spine in ''Dimetrodon'' but has a lower neural spine in ''Secodontosaurus''. Robert R. Reisz and others described the skull in detail in 1992, based mostly on a nearly complete skull specimen (MCZ 1124) about long, preserved with a left mandible. In addition to the long, low skull and nearly uniform size of the teeth that contrast with ''Dimetrodon'', the anterior teeth of the upper jaw are slanted back and those of the lower jaw are directed forward for grasping prey. Its rather crocodile-like skull suggests that ''Secodontosaurus'' could have been semi-aquatic and may have fed on fish and small swimming amphibians. However, Reisz and his coauthors noted that a tall sail would seem to be a hindrance in pursuit of quick-moving creatures underwater. Instead, the long, narrow snout with forward slanting teeth at the mandible tip might have allowed ''Secodontosaurus'' to probe after small animals hiding in burrows and other tight spaces.


Discovery and classification

The American paleontologist
Edward Drinker Cope Edward Drinker Cope (July 28, 1840 – April 12, 1897) was an American zoologist, paleontologist, comparative anatomist, herpetologist, and ichthyologist. Born to a wealthy Quaker family, Cope distinguished himself as a child prodigy interested ...
published the first description of ''Secodontosaurus'' material in 1880 as a supposed species of his genus ''Theropleura'' ("mammal rib"). ''Theropleura'' Cope, 1878 is a junior synonym of ''
Ophiacodon ''Ophiacodon'' (meaning "snake tooth") is an extinct genus of synapsid belonging to the family Ophiacodontidae that lived from the Late Carboniferous to the Early Permian in North America and Europe. The genus was named along with its type spec ...
'' Marsh, 1878 ("snake point tooth"). The specimen, AMNH 4007 collected by
Jacob Boll Jacob Boll (28 May 1828 – 29 September 1880) was a Swiss naturalist and entomologist especially noted for his exploration of the Texas Red Beds. Boll was born 1828 in Würenlos, Switzerland, and educated as a pharmacist in Switzerland and G ...
, was actually a composite that included bones of "amphibians" and a sphenacodontid. Cope described the teeth as having "apices are not very acute. The superficial coating is striate with fifteen or sixteen rather obtuse ridges"—features expressed in the species name ''Theropleura obtusidens'' (Latin for "obtuse tooth" or "blunt-toothed"). E. C. Case described another specimen of ''Secodontosaurus'', AMNH 4091, as ''Dimetrodon longiramus'' long (lower jaw) ramus"in 1907. In 1916 S. W. Williston illustrated parts of the upper and lower jaws of a new, then unnamed genus, specimen FMNH (WM) 573, that he took for a member of the ophiacodontids, noting, however, its "broader, flattened, and cutting teeth" compared to ''Ophiacodon'', which has mainly pointed conical teeth. In his 1925 ''Osteology of the Reptiles'', Williston listed the name ''Secodontosaurus'' under the Ophiacodontidae, presumably as the new genus from 1916, but did not provide a description or an explanation. Williston likely chose the name ''Secodontosaurus'' "cutting-tooth lizard" for flat, sharp-edged secodont"teeth that contrasted with the conical teeth typically found in ophiacodontids. In 1936 A. S. Romer made Williston's proposed generic name official but identified ''Secodontosaurus'' as a sphenacodontid related to ''Dimetrodon'' instead of an ophiacodontid. He also chose Case's ''Dimetrodon longiramus'' as the type species and erected the new species ''S. willistoni'' from the Clear Fork group, noting its later occurrence and larger size. In 1940 Romer and Price gave priority to Cope's species ''obtusidens'' over the synonym ''longiramus''. When Reisz and others redescribed the skull and reviewed other known material for ''Secodontosaurus'' in 1992, they also made the species ''S. willistoni'' from the later Clear Fork group a junior synonym of Cope's ''obtusidens'', although this species is sometimes retained as distinct in other sources.


Evolutionary relationship to ''Dimetrodon''

Determining exactly how the members of the Sphenacodontidae—''
Dimetrodon ''Dimetrodon'' ( or ,) meaning "two measures of teeth,” is an extinct genus of non-mammalian synapsid that lived during the Cisuralian (Early Permian), around 295–272 million years ago (Mya). It is a member of the family Sphenacodontid ...
'', ''
Sphenacodon ''Sphenacodon'' (meaning "wedge point tooth") is an extinct genus of synapsid that lived from about 300 to about 280 million years ago (Ma) during the Late Carboniferous and Early Permian periods. Like the closely related '' Dimetrodon'', ''Sphen ...
'', ''
Ctenospondylus ''Ctenospondylus'' ("comb vertebra") is an extinct genus of sphenacodontid synapsid Species were about three meters (ten feet) long. The genus is known only from the 'Seymouran' Land Vertebrate Faunachron, which is equivalent to the upper part ...
'', ''
Cryptovenator ''Cryptovenator'' (''Crypto'', from Greek kryptos (hidden, secret); ''venator'', from Latin (hunter)) is an extinct genus of sphenacodontid pelycosaurs which existed in Germany during the latest Carboniferous (late Gzhelian age, 300 Ma ± 2.4 ...
'', and ''Secodontosaurus''—are related to each other has posed an evolutionary puzzle for paleontologists. ''Dimetrodon'' and ''Secodontosaurus'' have very similar postcranial skeletons, with a tall dorsal sail supported by thin, rodlike cylindrical neural spines. By contrast, ''Sphenacodon'' and ''Ctenospondylus'' have a lower dorsal crest formed from flat, blade-like neural spines, relatively low in ''Sphenacodon'' and taller in ''Ctenospondylus''. However, ''Dimetrodon'', ''Sphenacodon'', and ''Ctenospondylus'' have very similar deep skulls with teeth of different sizes while ''Seconodontosaurus'' has an unusual low, elongated skull with more uniform teeth. Depending on whether the tall dorsal sail or the deep skull is considered the key character in the phylogeny of sphenacodontids, ''Secodontosaurus'' is either in a clade with ''Dimetrodon'' that excludes ''Sphenacodon'' or is placed on a distinct branch of its own with ''Dimetrodon'' and ''Sphenacodon'' united in a separate clade. In one evolutionary scenario, the tall-sailed ''Secodontosaurus'' would have evolved a specialized elongated narrow skull from the deep skull found in a tall-sailed common ancestor that it would have shared with the equally tall-sailed ''Dimetrodon''. The deep-skulled—but low-crested—''Sphenacodon'' would be outside the ''Secodontosaurus''-''Dimetrodon'' clade and would retain characteristics of an earlier stage of sphenacodontid evolution before a tall, thin-spined dorsal sail evolved. Alternative scenarios in which ''Dimetrodon'', ''Sphenacodon'', and ''Ctenospondylus'' are united in a deep-skulled clade (Sphenacodontinae) that excludes ''Secodontosaurus'' require that either (1) tall, rod-like neural spines are plesiomorphic in the Sphenacodontidae so that the common ancestor of all four genera had a tall dorsal sail that was retained in ''Secodontosaurus'' and in ''Dimetrodon'', but was lost by character reversal in ''Sphenacodon'', or (2) the common ancestor of all four genera lacked a tall dorsal sail (and so more closely resembled ''Sphenacodon''), in which case both ''Secodontosaurus'' and ''Dimetrodon'' would have evolved their very similar-looking tall sails completely independently as an apomorphy. Most recent analyses favor a monophyletic group Sphenacodontinae composed of ''Dimetrodon'', ''Sphenacodon'', and ''Ctenospondylus'', based mainly on shared characters in the skull and the mandible. According to these phylogenetic hypotheses, the long-skulled ''Secodontosaurus'' represents a separate branch at the base of the Sphenacodontidae. More complete fossils of early sphenacodontids such as ''Cryptovenator'' (currently known only from jaw material) and other forms from the Late Carboniferous (Pennsylvanian) could help clarify the evolution of the group, and how many times and at what evolutionary stage sails developed.
Cladogram A cladogram (from Greek ''clados'' "branch" and ''gramma'' "character") is a diagram used in cladistics to show relations among organisms. A cladogram is not, however, an evolutionary tree because it does not show how ancestors are related to d ...
after Fröbisch et al., 2011:


See also

*
List of pelycosaurs This list of pelycosaurs is an attempt to create a comprehensive listing of all genera that have ever been included in the synapsida excluding therapsida and purely vernacular terms. The list includes all commonly accepted genera, but also genera t ...


References

{{Taxonbar, from=Q2397856 Sphenacodontidae Prehistoric synapsid genera Cisuralian synapsids of North America Taxa named by Alfred Romer Fossil taxa described in 1936 Cisuralian genus first appearances Cisuralian genus extinctions