Communication orale non publiée/Abstract (Colloques et congrès scientifiques)
Quantifying the early ecomorphological diversification of Eosauropterygia
Laboury, Antoine; Scheyer, Torsten M.; Klein, Nicole et al.
2022SVP 2022 Annual Meeting
 

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Mots-clés :
Sauropterygia; Disparity; Macroevolutionary landscape; Nothosauroidea; Pachypleurosauroidea; Pistosauroidea; Middle Triassic; Phylomorphospace; Convergence
Résumé :
[en] The Triassic biotic recovery following the end-Permian mass extinction is marked by a rapid radiation of reptiles secondarily adapted to marine environments. The diversification of Eosauropterygia, the most speciose clade of marine reptiles, is a key part of that rise to dominance of aquatic reptiles. Recent studies of eosauropterygian disparity through the Mesozoic highlighted that the greatest extent of morphological diversity was recorded during the Middle Triassic. This period indeed sees the co-occurrence of numerous species with various body-size ranges, diets, and swimming modes: pachypleurosaurs, nothosaurs and pistosaurs, mostly in the Tethys Ocean. However, these broad-brush studies have focussed their investigations on the shape of mandible and teeth, thus leaving out a significant portion of skeleton. As a result, our understanding of the disparity of Triassic eosauropterygians and how it has fluctuated between groups is limited. To tackle this issue, we reinvestigated and quantified morphological diversification of long-bodied Triassic eosauropterygians. We erected 32 biomechanically-informative traits on teeth, mandible, limbs, and axial skeleton for 142 specimens spread over 36 species belonging to Pachypleurosauroidea, Nothosauroidea and Pistosauroidea. We submitted our trait data to ordination methods to recreate the evolution of morphospace occupation by Triassic eosauropterygians. Our multivariate analyses highlight clear ecomorphological differences between these three clades, with no evidence for important whole-body convergent evolution. This morphological distinction is however stronger in cranial rather than in postcranial anatomy: postcranial anatomy morphospace recovers nothosaurs and pistosaurs as distinct but pachypleurosaurs slightly overlaps with the two former groups. This suggests a decoupling in the morphological evolution of these two regions, similar to what has proposed for derived, short-necked plesiosaurians.
Disciplines :
Sciences de la terre & géographie physique
Auteur, co-auteur :
Laboury, Antoine  ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > Geology
Scheyer, Torsten M.;  UZH - University of Zürich [CH] > Paleontological Institute and Museum
Klein, Nicole;  Rheinisch Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universitat Bonn > Institute of Geosciences > Paleontology
Sutbbs, Thomas;  University of Bristol [US] > Earth Sciences
Fischer, Valentin  ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > Département de géologie > Evolution and diversity dynamics lab ; Université de Liège - ULiège > Geology
Langue du document :
Anglais
Titre :
Quantifying the early ecomorphological diversification of Eosauropterygia
Titre traduit :
[fr] Quantification de la diversification écomorphologique initiale du clade Eosauropterygia
Date de publication/diffusion :
02 novembre 2022
Nom de la manifestation :
SVP 2022 Annual Meeting
Organisateur de la manifestation :
Society of Vertebrate Paleontology
Lieu de la manifestation :
Toronto, Canada
Date de la manifestation :
02/11/2022
Manifestation à portée :
International
Organisme subsidiant :
F.R.S.-FNRS - Fonds de la Recherche Scientifique
N° du Fonds :
FC38761
Disponible sur ORBi :
depuis le 02 janvier 2023

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