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Bergisuchus

Bergisuchus is an extinct genus of small sebecosuchian mesoeucrocodylian known primarily from the Eocene Messel Pit in Germany. Few fossils of Bergisuchus have been discovered, only a single incomplete snout, a few partial lower jaws and some teeth. Despite being fragmentary, the jaw bones are enough to indicate that Bergisuchus had a short, deep, narrow snout and serrated teeth, quite unlike the broad flat snouts of modern crocodylians.

Bergisuchus
Temporal range: Middle Eocene
Early to Middle Lutetian
Bergisuchus dietrichbergi holotype mandible, HLMD-Me 7003.
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Clade: Archosauria
Clade: Pseudosuchia
Clade: Crocodylomorpha
Clade: Crocodyliformes
Clade: Notosuchia
Clade: Sebecosuchia
Clade: Sebecia
Family: Bergisuchidae
Rossmann, Rauhe & Ortega 2000
Genus: Bergisuchus
Kuhn, 1968
Species:
B. dietrichbergi
Binomial name
Bergisuchus dietrichbergi
Kuhn, 1968

As with other sebecosuchians, it is likely that Bergisuchus was a fast, terrestrial predator and not an aquatic ambush hunter like modern crocodylians. Its presence in Europe is also unusual, as later sebecosuchians were restricted entirely to South America, and so Bergisuchus indicates the group was once much more widespread in the early Cenozoic.

History of Discovery edit

Bergisuchus was first discovered by Dr. Dietrich Berg from the German Messel Pit in 1966, who originally classified it as an unnamed new species of sebecosuchian with close affinities to Sebecus, notable for being the first sebecosuchian remains to be recognised outside South America.[1] It was named and described two years later in 1968 by German palaeontologist Oskar Kuhn, who named the binomial Bergisuchus dietrichbergi in honour of Dr. Berg and combined it with the Greek suffix suchos for "crocodile". Bergisuchus is known from the holotype snout and lower jaw (HLMD-Me 7003) from the Messel Pit near Darmstadt first reported in 1966, dated to the Mammal Paleogene zone (MP) 11, and an additional incomplete pair of mandibles (GM XVIII-49) from the Geiseltal open-pit coal mine near Halle in the state of Saxony-Anhalt from the slightly younger MP 12.[2] The holotype is stored in the Hessisches Landesmuseum Darmstadt, while the paratype is housed in the Geiseltal Collection of the Center for Natural Science Collections at the Martin Luther University of Halle-Wittenberg, in Germany.[2][3]

In 2015, osteoderms from karst deposits dated to the Middle Eocene in Lissieu, France, were tentatively suggested to belong to Bergisuchus sp., or alternatively to Iberosuchus sp. (another European sebecosuchian). This referral was based on the similarity between the osteoderms and those of Baurusuchus and other sebecosuchians, as the two genera are the only known European sebecosuchians.[4]

Description edit

Bergisuchus is only represented by the holotype snout and lower jaw (HLMD-Me 7003) and the referred pair of lower jaws (GM XVIII-49), so much of its anatomy is unknown. The snout is tall and laterally compressed, unlike the broad flat snouts of modern crocodylians, with tall nasals that form a raised, sharp midline along the length of the snout. Rossmann and colleagues reconstructed the incomplete premaxillae as tall and steep based on the dimensions of the maxilla, more similar in shape to those of Baurusuchus, Barinasuchus and Bretesuchus than to Sebecus. The premaxilla may also have sloped downwards, similar to that of Bretesuchus.[2] Overall, the snout is relatively short and deep compared to the long, low skull of Sebecus.[5] A deep notch is present between the maxilla and premaxilla to house the large lower canine tooth, along with a prominent bulge of bone above each. Based on the shape of the known snout, it's likely that Bergisuchus had separate nostril openings that faced laterally on the surface, as well as laterally facing eyes, unlike modern crocodylians. Also, it shares with Iberosuchus the unusual presence of a small antorbital fenestra, a feature that's invariably absent in both baurusuchids and sebecids. The surface of the maxilla is profusely sculpted with ridges and grooves, a feature that clearly distinguishes it from Iberosuchus.[2][6]

The lower jaws are mostly only known from incomplete dentaries (as well as part of the splenial), and their surfaces are as similarly strongly sculpted as the upper jaws. The teeth are relatively narrow and serrated (ziphodont), similar to those of predatory theropod dinosaurs and unlike the conical teeth of modern crocodylians. Few teeth themselves are preserved, but they include a very large and prominent serrated 'pseudocanine' that fits into the notch of the upper jaw. This canine is approximately 2 cm tall, and sits on a prominently raised portion of the jaw bone, which arches down in front and behind it and so the rest of the jaw is quite shallow.[6] The rest of the teeth are mostly missing, but the size and shape of the remaining alveoli indicate the size and position of the other teeth in the jaws. The other teeth are around 3 times smaller in diameter than the canines, a unique characteristic of this genus, and are closely packed behind the canine in the lower jaw. Three small teeth are present in front of the canine, the first of which is larger and procumbent, facing up and forwards at the front of the jaw. The maxillary teeth are similarly small, the largest being the third tooth, and the rest of which getting progressively smaller behind it. Premaxillary teeth are unknown, but it possibly had another pair of larger 'pseudocanines' in the upper jaw. It is estimated that there were only 13 teeth in each lower jaw, and at least 13—14 in the upper jaw, a relatively small number compared to other sebecosuchians like Iberosuchus. The teeth are not as strongly compressed as other ziphodont crocodilians, and so may have been stronger and more resistant to stress.[2]

Rossmann and colleagues estimated the total body length of Bergisuchus to be around 1.5 metres (4.9 ft) based on other short-snouted, partially terrestrial crocodylians including Allognathosuchus and the extant dwarf caimans Paleosuchus. Despite its small size, they believed both specimens to represent mature adults, based on both the degree of fusion between the sutures in the skull and the extent of the dermal sculpting on the surface of the bones. As a sebecosuchian, Bergisuchus likely had long limbs that were positioned directly under its body and moved with a parasagittal gait, unlike the sprawling limbs of modern crocodylians. It is unknown if it had a reduced covering of osteoderms like some other sebecosuchians, but no osteoderms were found associated with either individual (although isolated osteoderms have been tentatively referred to this genus).[2][4]

Classification edit

Bergisuchus was identified as a sebecosuchian by Dr. Berg when it was first discovered, closely allied to the South American genus Sebecus as "aff. Sebecus? n. sp.".[1] It was later variously assigned to the family Baurusuchidae by Steel in 1973,[7][8] and also in the now defunct family Trematochampsidae by Buffetaut in 1988.[9] At the time it was unclear what diagnostic traits where unique to each group and which were shared between them, and so the fragmentary Bergisuchus could not be confidently identified and was sometimes placed in incertae sedis for this reason.[10] In 2000, the sebecosuchian affinities of Bergisuchus, particularly to Sebecus, were established by Rossmann and colleagues in a thorough re-examination of the material, and it was assigned to its own monotypic family, the Bergisuchidae, as it was considered too distinct from Sebecus to belong to the same family.[2]

The position of Bergisuchus as a close relative of Sebecus has since been supported by a number of phylogenetic analyses of Mesozoic and Cenozoic mesoeucrocodylians, although the interrelationships of Bergisuchus, Sebecidae and other clades are not settled. The cladograms below are simplified from two recent phylogenetic analyses of mesoeucrocodylians, that of Pol et al. (2014) and of Piacentini Pinheiro et al. (2018), displaying the alternative arrangements of Sebecidae in either Sebecosuchia and Sebecia.[Note 1] The former analysis found Bergisuchus and Iberosuchus as sebecosuchians closely related to but excluded from Sebecidae, while the latter analysis recovers Bergisuchus well within Sebecidae, as per the definitions used in the study:

Palaeobiology edit

Palaeoecology edit

 
Skeleton of the contemporary terrestrial crocodilian Boverisuchus.

The Messel Pit is famous for its well-preserved fossils, which include semi-aquatic crocodylians such as Asiatosuchus and Diplocynodon. Unlike these crocodylians, Bergisuchus was a small terrestrial hypercarnivore. Rossmann and colleagues speculated extensively about the palaeoecology of Bergisuchus. They suggested that Bergisuchus did not inhabit the fluvial and lacustrine habitats around the Messel and Geiseltal sites. They interpreted the rare, fragmented material as evidence for the bones being transported into these settings from elsewhere, compared to the more abundant and more complete crocodylians from these sites that were well preserved by the local conditions. They further speculated that Bergisuchus may have inhabited drier upland regions from these lakes and rivers, potentially coexisting alongside predatory creodont mammals in the Geiseltal area and avoiding competition with the similarly terrestrial but unrelated planocraniid crocodilians like Boverisuchus.[2]

The reduced ziphodont dentition of Bergisuchus with large teeth concentrated at the front of the jaws is somewhat similar to that of baurusuchids such as Stratiotosuchus, which have reduced their maxillary tooth count down to only 5 teeth. This has been suggested to be a specialisation for hunting large-sized prey items by imparting more powerful bites at the very front of the jaws. This is unlike the condition of most other sebecids, which have more generalised dentitions with similarly sized teeth throughout the jaw, which may have preferred smaller to mid-sized prey.[13][14] The deeper snout and less compressed, stronger teeth of Bergisuchus also suggest that it was capable of withstanding greater forces relatively than planocraniids, and is inferred to be capable of catching and dismembering prey by thrashing its head in any direction, unlike planocraniids.[2]

The unusual differentiated heterodont teeth were interpreted as evidence for a relatively complex method for processing food, and they suggested that Bergisuchus used the large canines at the front of the jaws as fangs and the smaller rear teeth to "chew" and process food before swallowing. They also suggested that the huge, exaggerated canines could possibly have been used as sexual signals or as weapons in intraspecific competition, rather than predation.[2]

Palaeobiogeography edit

The presence of Bergisuchus in Europe has been regarded as evidence for a connection between the faunas from South America and Europe in the early Eocene, as other Cenozoic sebecosuchians are mostly known from South America. This link has been supported by the presence of other South American lineages contemporaneous with Bergisuchus in the Messel pit, including purported phorusrhacid birds and herpetotheriid marsupials.[15] Eocene European ecosystems containing sebecosuchians like Bergisuchus have been compared to those of later South America, with predator guilds composed of mammals, phorusrhacids and sebecosuchians, supporting this affinity.[4] Furthermore, Bergisuchus and Iberosuchus do not appear to be closely related to the Cretaceous sebecosuchian Doratodon, which was found across Europe during the Late Cretaceous. This appears to indicate that Bergisuchus and other European sebecosuchians did not descend from Cretaceous European sebecosuchians like Doratodon, but was instead part of a separate invasion of sebecosuchians into Europe during the Palaeogene from South America.[16] This is further supported by the presence of the Algerian Eocene sebecosuchian Eremosuchus in Africa, which has been suggested to be evidence that sebecosuchians reached Europe from South America via Africa, as opposed to through North America where no sebecosuchian remains have been found.[17][18]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Sebecosuchia is cladistically defined as the node containing Sebecidae and Baurusuchidae, assuming a close relationship between the two. Sebecia is a similar concept but for the node containing Sebecidae and Peirosauridae. The validity of each clade depends on the position of Sebecidae within Mesoeucrocodylia, often involving its relationship to Notosuchia.

References edit

  1. ^ a b Martin, Jeremy (2016). "New material of the ziphodont mesoeucrocodylian Iberosuchus from the Eocene of Languedoc, southern France" (PDF). Annales de Paléontologie. 102 (2): 135–144. Bibcode:2016AnPal.102..135M. doi:10.1016/j.annpal.2016.05.002.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Rossmann, T.; Rauhe, M.; Ortega, F. (2000). "Studies on Cenozoic crocodiles: 8. Bergisuchus dietrichbergi Kuhn (Sebecosuchia: Bergisuchidae n. fam.) from the Middle Eocene of Germany, some new systematic and biological conclusions". Paläontologische Zeitschrift. 74 (3): 379–392. Bibcode:2000PalZ...74..379R. doi:10.1007/BF02988108. S2CID 129507618.
  3. ^ Steinheimer, Frank D.; Hastings, Alexander K. (2018). Beck L.; Joger U. (eds.). HALLE: The Geiseltal Collection of Martin Luther University, Halle-Wittenberg. Paleontological Collections of Germany, Austria and Switzerland. Natural History Collections. Springer, Cham. pp. 271–280. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-77401-5_25. ISBN 9783319774008.
  4. ^ a b c Martin, Jeremy (2015). "A sebecosuchian in a middle Eocene karst with comments on the dorsal shield in Crocodylomorpha". Acta Palaeontologica Polonica. 3 (60): 673–680.
  5. ^ Molnar, R. (2010). "A new reconstruction of the skull of Sebecus icaeorhinus (Crocodyliformes: Sebecosuchia) from the Eocene of Argentina". Brazilian Geographical Journal: Geosciences and Humanities Research Medium. 1 (2). Uberlândia: 314–330. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.300.8530.
  6. ^ a b Ortega, F.; Buscaloni, A.D; Gasaparini, Z. (1996). "Reinterpretation and new denomination of Atacisaurus crassiproratus (Middle Eocene; Issel, France) as cf. Iberosuchus (Crocodylomorpha, Metasuchia)". Geobios. 29 (3): 353–364. Bibcode:1996Geobi..29..353O. doi:10.1016/S0016-6995(96)80037-4.
  7. ^ Steel, R. (1973). Kuhn, O.; Wellnhofer, P. (eds.). Crocodylia. Handbuch der Paläoherpetologie (in German). Vol. 16. Fischer. ISBN 978-3437301414.
  8. ^ Carroll, Robert L. (1988). Vertebrate Paleontology and Evolution. W. H. Freeman and Company. p. 620. ISBN 978-0716718222. OCLC 922750908.
  9. ^ Turner, A. H.; Calvo, J. O. (2005). "A new sebecosuchian crocodyliform from the Late Cretaceous of Patagonia". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 25 (1): 87–98. doi:10.1671/0272-4634(2005)025[0087:ANSCFT]2.0.CO;2. S2CID 86257810.
  10. ^ Gasparini, Z. (1984). "New Tertiary Sebecosuchia (Crocodylia: Mesosuchia) from Argentina". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 4 (1): 85–95. Bibcode:1984JVPal...4...85G. doi:10.1080/02724634.1984.10011988.
  11. ^ Pol, Diego; Nascimento, Paulo M.; Carvalho, Alberto B.; Riccomini, Claudio; Pires-Domingues, Ricardo A.; Zaher, Hussam (2014). "A New Notosuchian from the Late Cretaceous of Brazil and the Phylogeny of Advanced Notosuchians". PLoS ONE. 9 (4): e93105. Bibcode:2014PLoSO...993105P. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0093105. PMC 3973723. PMID 24695105.
  12. ^ Piacentini Pinheiro, A.E.; Pereira, P.V.L.G.dC.; de Souza, R.G.; Brum, A.S.; Lopes, R.T.; Machado, A.S.; Bergqvist, L.P.; Simbras, F.M. (2018). "Reassessment of the enigmatic crocodyliform "Goniopholis" paulistanus Roxo, 1936: Historical approach, systematic, and description by new materials". PLoS ONE. 13 (8): e0199984. Bibcode:2018PLoSO..1399984P. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0199984. PMC 6070184. PMID 30067779.
  13. ^ Leardi, J. M.; Pol, D.; Gasparini, Z. (2018). "New Patagonian baurusuchids (Crocodylomorpha; Notosuchia) from the Bajo de la Carpa Formation (Upper Cretaceous; Neuquén, Argentina): New evidences of the early sebecosuchian diversification in Gondwana". Comptes Rendus Palevol. 7 (8): 504–521. Bibcode:2018CRPal..17..504L. doi:10.1016/j.crpv.2018.02.002.
  14. ^ Pinheiro, A. E. P.; Bertini, R. J.; Andrade, M. D.; Neto, R. M. (2008). "A new specimen of Stratiotosuchus maxhechti (Baurusuchidae, Crocodyliformes) from the Adamantina Formation (Upper Cretaceous), Southeastern Brazil". Revista Brasileira de Paleontologia. 11 (1): 37–50. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.734.6541. doi:10.4072/rbp.2008.1.04.
  15. ^ Agusti, Jordi; Antón, Mauricio (2002). "The Eocene: Reaching the Climax". Mammoths, Sabertooths, and Hominids: 65 Million Years of Mammalian Evolution in Europe. Columbia University Press. pp. 48–50. ISBN 978-0-231-11640-4. OCLC 61129178.
  16. ^ Rabi, M.; Sebők, N. (2015). "A revised Eurogondwana model: Late Cretaceous notosuchian crocodyliforms and other vertebrate taxa suggest the retention of episodic faunal links between Europe and Gondwana during most of the Cretaceous". Gondwana Research. 28 (3): 1197–1211. Bibcode:2015GondR..28.1197R. doi:10.1016/j.gr.2014.09.015.
  17. ^ Buffetaut, E. (1982). "A ziphodont mesosuchian crocodile from the Eocene of Algeria and its implications for vertebrate dispersal". Nature. 300 (5888): 176–178. Bibcode:1982Natur.300..176B. doi:10.1038/300176a0. S2CID 4323999.
  18. ^ Buffetaut, E. (1989). "A new ziphodont mesosuchian crocodile from the Eocene of Algeria". Palaeontographica. 208: 1–10.

bergisuchus, extinct, genus, small, sebecosuchian, mesoeucrocodylian, known, primarily, from, eocene, messel, germany, fossils, have, been, discovered, only, single, incomplete, snout, partial, lower, jaws, some, teeth, despite, being, fragmentary, bones, enou. Bergisuchus is an extinct genus of small sebecosuchian mesoeucrocodylian known primarily from the Eocene Messel Pit in Germany Few fossils of Bergisuchus have been discovered only a single incomplete snout a few partial lower jaws and some teeth Despite being fragmentary the jaw bones are enough to indicate that Bergisuchus had a short deep narrow snout and serrated teeth quite unlike the broad flat snouts of modern crocodylians BergisuchusTemporal range Middle EoceneEarly to Middle Lutetian PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg N Bergisuchus dietrichbergi holotype mandible HLMD Me 7003 Scientific classification Domain Eukaryota Kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Class Reptilia Clade Archosauria Clade Pseudosuchia Clade Crocodylomorpha Clade Crocodyliformes Clade Notosuchia Clade Sebecosuchia Clade Sebecia Family BergisuchidaeRossmann Rauhe amp Ortega 2000 Genus BergisuchusKuhn 1968 Species B dietrichbergi Binomial name Bergisuchus dietrichbergiKuhn 1968 As with other sebecosuchians it is likely that Bergisuchus was a fast terrestrial predator and not an aquatic ambush hunter like modern crocodylians Its presence in Europe is also unusual as later sebecosuchians were restricted entirely to South America and so Bergisuchus indicates the group was once much more widespread in the early Cenozoic Contents 1 History of Discovery 2 Description 3 Classification 4 Palaeobiology 4 1 Palaeoecology 4 2 Palaeobiogeography 5 Notes 6 ReferencesHistory of Discovery editBergisuchus was first discovered by Dr Dietrich Berg from the German Messel Pit in 1966 who originally classified it as an unnamed new species of sebecosuchian with close affinities to Sebecus notable for being the first sebecosuchian remains to be recognised outside South America 1 It was named and described two years later in 1968 by German palaeontologist Oskar Kuhn who named the binomial Bergisuchus dietrichbergi in honour of Dr Berg and combined it with the Greek suffix suchos for crocodile Bergisuchus is known from the holotype snout and lower jaw HLMD Me 7003 from the Messel Pit near Darmstadt first reported in 1966 dated to the Mammal Paleogene zone MP 11 and an additional incomplete pair of mandibles GM XVIII 49 from the Geiseltal open pit coal mine near Halle in the state of Saxony Anhalt from the slightly younger MP 12 2 The holotype is stored in the Hessisches Landesmuseum Darmstadt while the paratype is housed in the Geiseltal Collection of the Center for Natural Science Collections at the Martin Luther University of Halle Wittenberg in Germany 2 3 In 2015 osteoderms from karst deposits dated to the Middle Eocene in Lissieu France were tentatively suggested to belong to Bergisuchus sp or alternatively to Iberosuchus sp another European sebecosuchian This referral was based on the similarity between the osteoderms and those of Baurusuchus and other sebecosuchians as the two genera are the only known European sebecosuchians 4 Description editBergisuchus is only represented by the holotype snout and lower jaw HLMD Me 7003 and the referred pair of lower jaws GM XVIII 49 so much of its anatomy is unknown The snout is tall and laterally compressed unlike the broad flat snouts of modern crocodylians with tall nasals that form a raised sharp midline along the length of the snout Rossmann and colleagues reconstructed the incomplete premaxillae as tall and steep based on the dimensions of the maxilla more similar in shape to those of Baurusuchus Barinasuchus and Bretesuchus than to Sebecus The premaxilla may also have sloped downwards similar to that of Bretesuchus 2 Overall the snout is relatively short and deep compared to the long low skull of Sebecus 5 A deep notch is present between the maxilla and premaxilla to house the large lower canine tooth along with a prominent bulge of bone above each Based on the shape of the known snout it s likely that Bergisuchus had separate nostril openings that faced laterally on the surface as well as laterally facing eyes unlike modern crocodylians Also it shares with Iberosuchus the unusual presence of a small antorbital fenestra a feature that s invariably absent in both baurusuchids and sebecids The surface of the maxilla is profusely sculpted with ridges and grooves a feature that clearly distinguishes it from Iberosuchus 2 6 The lower jaws are mostly only known from incomplete dentaries as well as part of the splenial and their surfaces are as similarly strongly sculpted as the upper jaws The teeth are relatively narrow and serrated ziphodont similar to those of predatory theropod dinosaurs and unlike the conical teeth of modern crocodylians Few teeth themselves are preserved but they include a very large and prominent serrated pseudocanine that fits into the notch of the upper jaw This canine is approximately 2 cm tall and sits on a prominently raised portion of the jaw bone which arches down in front and behind it and so the rest of the jaw is quite shallow 6 The rest of the teeth are mostly missing but the size and shape of the remaining alveoli indicate the size and position of the other teeth in the jaws The other teeth are around 3 times smaller in diameter than the canines a unique characteristic of this genus and are closely packed behind the canine in the lower jaw Three small teeth are present in front of the canine the first of which is larger and procumbent facing up and forwards at the front of the jaw The maxillary teeth are similarly small the largest being the third tooth and the rest of which getting progressively smaller behind it Premaxillary teeth are unknown but it possibly had another pair of larger pseudocanines in the upper jaw It is estimated that there were only 13 teeth in each lower jaw and at least 13 14 in the upper jaw a relatively small number compared to other sebecosuchians like Iberosuchus The teeth are not as strongly compressed as other ziphodont crocodilians and so may have been stronger and more resistant to stress 2 Rossmann and colleagues estimated the total body length of Bergisuchus to be around 1 5 metres 4 9 ft based on other short snouted partially terrestrial crocodylians including Allognathosuchus and the extant dwarf caimans Paleosuchus Despite its small size they believed both specimens to represent mature adults based on both the degree of fusion between the sutures in the skull and the extent of the dermal sculpting on the surface of the bones As a sebecosuchian Bergisuchus likely had long limbs that were positioned directly under its body and moved with a parasagittal gait unlike the sprawling limbs of modern crocodylians It is unknown if it had a reduced covering of osteoderms like some other sebecosuchians but no osteoderms were found associated with either individual although isolated osteoderms have been tentatively referred to this genus 2 4 Classification editBergisuchus was identified as a sebecosuchian by Dr Berg when it was first discovered closely allied to the South American genus Sebecus as aff Sebecus n sp 1 It was later variously assigned to the family Baurusuchidae by Steel in 1973 7 8 and also in the now defunct family Trematochampsidae by Buffetaut in 1988 9 At the time it was unclear what diagnostic traits where unique to each group and which were shared between them and so the fragmentary Bergisuchus could not be confidently identified and was sometimes placed in incertae sedis for this reason 10 In 2000 the sebecosuchian affinities of Bergisuchus particularly to Sebecus were established by Rossmann and colleagues in a thorough re examination of the material and it was assigned to its own monotypic family the Bergisuchidae as it was considered too distinct from Sebecus to belong to the same family 2 The position of Bergisuchus as a close relative of Sebecus has since been supported by a number of phylogenetic analyses of Mesozoic and Cenozoic mesoeucrocodylians although the interrelationships of Bergisuchus Sebecidae and other clades are not settled The cladograms below are simplified from two recent phylogenetic analyses of mesoeucrocodylians that of Pol et al 2014 and of Piacentini Pinheiro et al 2018 displaying the alternative arrangements of Sebecidae in either Sebecosuchia and Sebecia Note 1 The former analysis found Bergisuchus and Iberosuchus as sebecosuchians closely related to but excluded from Sebecidae while the latter analysis recovers Bergisuchus well within Sebecidae as per the definitions used in the study Topology of Pol et al 2014 11 Sebecosuchia Baurusuchidae Cynodontosuchus Pissarrachampsa Stratiotosuchus Campinasuchus Baurusuchus albertoi nbsp Baurusuchus pachecoi Baurusuchus salgadoensis nbsp Bergisuchus Iberosuchus Sebecidae Lorosuchus Barinasuchus Ayllusuchus Bretesuchus nbsp Sebecus huilensis nbsp Sebecus icaeorhinus nbsp Sebecus querejazus Lumbrera form Topology of Piacentini Pinheiro et al 2018 12 Sebecia Stolokrosuchus Barreirosuchus Ayllusuchus Itasuchidae nbsp Peirosauridae nbsp Mahajangasuchidae nbsp Sebecidae Sahitisuchus Bretesuchus nbsp Barinasuchus Sebecus icaeorhinus nbsp Sebecus huilensis nbsp Pehuenchesuchus Lorosuchus Sebecus querejazus Iberosuchus BergisuchusPalaeobiology editPalaeoecology edit nbsp Skeleton of the contemporary terrestrial crocodilian Boverisuchus The Messel Pit is famous for its well preserved fossils which include semi aquatic crocodylians such as Asiatosuchus and Diplocynodon Unlike these crocodylians Bergisuchus was a small terrestrial hypercarnivore Rossmann and colleagues speculated extensively about the palaeoecology of Bergisuchus They suggested that Bergisuchus did not inhabit the fluvial and lacustrine habitats around the Messel and Geiseltal sites They interpreted the rare fragmented material as evidence for the bones being transported into these settings from elsewhere compared to the more abundant and more complete crocodylians from these sites that were well preserved by the local conditions They further speculated that Bergisuchus may have inhabited drier upland regions from these lakes and rivers potentially coexisting alongside predatory creodont mammals in the Geiseltal area and avoiding competition with the similarly terrestrial but unrelated planocraniid crocodilians like Boverisuchus 2 The reduced ziphodont dentition of Bergisuchus with large teeth concentrated at the front of the jaws is somewhat similar to that of baurusuchids such as Stratiotosuchus which have reduced their maxillary tooth count down to only 5 teeth This has been suggested to be a specialisation for hunting large sized prey items by imparting more powerful bites at the very front of the jaws This is unlike the condition of most other sebecids which have more generalised dentitions with similarly sized teeth throughout the jaw which may have preferred smaller to mid sized prey 13 14 The deeper snout and less compressed stronger teeth of Bergisuchus also suggest that it was capable of withstanding greater forces relatively than planocraniids and is inferred to be capable of catching and dismembering prey by thrashing its head in any direction unlike planocraniids 2 The unusual differentiated heterodont teeth were interpreted as evidence for a relatively complex method for processing food and they suggested that Bergisuchus used the large canines at the front of the jaws as fangs and the smaller rear teeth to chew and process food before swallowing They also suggested that the huge exaggerated canines could possibly have been used as sexual signals or as weapons in intraspecific competition rather than predation 2 Palaeobiogeography edit The presence of Bergisuchus in Europe has been regarded as evidence for a connection between the faunas from South America and Europe in the early Eocene as other Cenozoic sebecosuchians are mostly known from South America This link has been supported by the presence of other South American lineages contemporaneous with Bergisuchus in the Messel pit including purported phorusrhacid birds and herpetotheriid marsupials 15 Eocene European ecosystems containing sebecosuchians like Bergisuchus have been compared to those of later South America with predator guilds composed of mammals phorusrhacids and sebecosuchians supporting this affinity 4 Furthermore Bergisuchus and Iberosuchus do not appear to be closely related to the Cretaceous sebecosuchian Doratodon which was found across Europe during the Late Cretaceous This appears to indicate that Bergisuchus and other European sebecosuchians did not descend from Cretaceous European sebecosuchians like Doratodon but was instead part of a separate invasion of sebecosuchians into Europe during the Palaeogene from South America 16 This is further supported by the presence of the Algerian Eocene sebecosuchian Eremosuchus in Africa which has been suggested to be evidence that sebecosuchians reached Europe from South America via Africa as opposed to through North America where no sebecosuchian remains have been found 17 18 Notes edit Sebecosuchia is cladistically defined as the node containing Sebecidae and Baurusuchidae assuming a close relationship between the two Sebecia is a similar concept but for the node containing Sebecidae and Peirosauridae The validity of each clade depends on the position of Sebecidae within Mesoeucrocodylia often involving its relationship to Notosuchia References edit a b Martin Jeremy 2016 New material of the ziphodont mesoeucrocodylian Iberosuchus from the Eocene of Languedoc southern France PDF Annales de Paleontologie 102 2 135 144 Bibcode 2016AnPal 102 135M doi 10 1016 j annpal 2016 05 002 a b c d e f g h i j Rossmann T Rauhe M Ortega F 2000 Studies on Cenozoic crocodiles 8 Bergisuchus dietrichbergi Kuhn Sebecosuchia Bergisuchidae n fam from the Middle Eocene of Germany some new systematic and biological conclusions Palaontologische Zeitschrift 74 3 379 392 Bibcode 2000PalZ 74 379R doi 10 1007 BF02988108 S2CID 129507618 Steinheimer Frank D Hastings Alexander K 2018 Beck L Joger U eds HALLE The Geiseltal Collection of Martin Luther University Halle Wittenberg Paleontological Collections of Germany Austria and Switzerland Natural History Collections Springer Cham pp 271 280 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 77401 5 25 ISBN 9783319774008 a b c Martin Jeremy 2015 A sebecosuchian in a middle Eocene karst with comments on the dorsal shield in Crocodylomorpha Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 3 60 673 680 Molnar R 2010 A new reconstruction of the skull of Sebecus icaeorhinus Crocodyliformes Sebecosuchia from the Eocene of Argentina Brazilian Geographical Journal Geosciences and Humanities Research Medium 1 2 Uberlandia 314 330 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 300 8530 a b Ortega F Buscaloni A D Gasaparini Z 1996 Reinterpretation and new denomination of Atacisaurus crassiproratus Middle Eocene Issel France as cf Iberosuchus Crocodylomorpha Metasuchia Geobios 29 3 353 364 Bibcode 1996Geobi 29 353O doi 10 1016 S0016 6995 96 80037 4 Steel R 1973 Kuhn O Wellnhofer P eds Crocodylia Handbuch der Palaoherpetologie in German Vol 16 Fischer ISBN 978 3437301414 Carroll Robert L 1988 Vertebrate Paleontology and Evolution W H Freeman and Company p 620 ISBN 978 0716718222 OCLC 922750908 Turner A H Calvo J O 2005 A new sebecosuchian crocodyliform from the Late Cretaceous of Patagonia Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 25 1 87 98 doi 10 1671 0272 4634 2005 025 0087 ANSCFT 2 0 CO 2 S2CID 86257810 Gasparini Z 1984 New Tertiary Sebecosuchia Crocodylia Mesosuchia from Argentina Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 4 1 85 95 Bibcode 1984JVPal 4 85G doi 10 1080 02724634 1984 10011988 Pol Diego Nascimento Paulo M Carvalho Alberto B Riccomini Claudio Pires Domingues Ricardo A Zaher Hussam 2014 A New Notosuchian from the Late Cretaceous of Brazil and the Phylogeny of Advanced Notosuchians PLoS ONE 9 4 e93105 Bibcode 2014PLoSO 993105P doi 10 1371 journal pone 0093105 PMC 3973723 PMID 24695105 Piacentini Pinheiro A E Pereira P V L G dC de Souza R G Brum A S Lopes R T Machado A S Bergqvist L P Simbras F M 2018 Reassessment of the enigmatic crocodyliform Goniopholis paulistanus Roxo 1936 Historical approach systematic and description by new materials PLoS ONE 13 8 e0199984 Bibcode 2018PLoSO 1399984P doi 10 1371 journal pone 0199984 PMC 6070184 PMID 30067779 Leardi J M Pol D Gasparini Z 2018 New Patagonian baurusuchids Crocodylomorpha Notosuchia from the Bajo de la Carpa Formation Upper Cretaceous Neuquen Argentina New evidences of the early sebecosuchian diversification in Gondwana Comptes Rendus Palevol 7 8 504 521 Bibcode 2018CRPal 17 504L doi 10 1016 j crpv 2018 02 002 Pinheiro A E P Bertini R J Andrade M D Neto R M 2008 A new specimen of Stratiotosuchus maxhechti Baurusuchidae Crocodyliformes from the Adamantina Formation Upper Cretaceous Southeastern Brazil Revista Brasileira de Paleontologia 11 1 37 50 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 734 6541 doi 10 4072 rbp 2008 1 04 Agusti Jordi Anton Mauricio 2002 The Eocene Reaching the Climax Mammoths Sabertooths and Hominids 65 Million Years of Mammalian Evolution in Europe Columbia University Press pp 48 50 ISBN 978 0 231 11640 4 OCLC 61129178 Rabi M Sebok N 2015 A revised Eurogondwana model Late Cretaceous notosuchian crocodyliforms and other vertebrate taxa suggest the retention of episodic faunal links between Europe and Gondwana during most of the Cretaceous Gondwana Research 28 3 1197 1211 Bibcode 2015GondR 28 1197R doi 10 1016 j gr 2014 09 015 Buffetaut E 1982 A ziphodont mesosuchian crocodile from the Eocene of Algeria and its implications for vertebrate dispersal Nature 300 5888 176 178 Bibcode 1982Natur 300 176B doi 10 1038 300176a0 S2CID 4323999 Buffetaut E 1989 A new ziphodont mesosuchian crocodile from the Eocene of Algeria Palaeontographica 208 1 10 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bergisuchus amp oldid 1221527812, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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