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general/jurassic-crocodylomorphs

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Neosuchia

Clade of reptiles

Neosuchia

Summary

Clade of reptiles

  • Burkesuchus
  • Gilchristosuchus
  • Isisfordia
  • Karatausuchus
  • Khoratosuchus
  • Montsecosuchus
  • Paluxysuchus
  • Stolokrosuchus?
  • Susisuchus
  • Tadzhikosuchus
  • Wahasuchus?
  • Atoposauridae
  • Bernissartiidae
  • Goniopholididae
  • Paralligatoridae
  • Stomatosuchidae
  • Tethysuchia
  • Thalattosuchia?
  • Wannchampsidae
  • Eusuchia (includes crocodylians)

Neosuchia is a clade within Mesoeucrocodylia that includes all modern extant crocodilians and their closest fossil relatives. It is defined as the most inclusive clade containing all crocodylomorphs more closely related to Crocodylus niloticus (the Nile Crocodile) than to Notosuchus terrestris. Members of Neosuchia generally share a crocodilian-like bodyform adapted to freshwater aquatic life, as opposed to the terrestrial habits of more basal crocodylomorph groups. The earliest neosuchian is suggested to be the Early Jurassic Calsoyasuchus, which lived during the Sinemurian and Pliensbachian stages in North America. It is often identified as a member of Goniopholididae, though this is disputed, and the taxon may lie outside Neosuchia, which places the earliest records of the group in the Middle Jurassic.

Characteristics

Life restoration of ''[[Siamosuchus]]'', a member of [[Goniopholididae]]

Members of Neosuchia have a wide diversity of skull shapes. Several groups convergently evolved elongate gharial-like skulls, which makes determining phylogenetic relationships of these taxa problematic.

Phylogeny

Cladogram from Groh et al. 2022:{{clade

References

References

  1. (2001). "New crocodyliform (Reptilia, Mesoeucrocodylia) from the Upper Cretaceous Pab Formation of Vitakri, Balochistan (Pakistan)". Contributions from the Museum of Paleontology, University of Michigan.
  2. (2001). "The giant crocodyliform ''Sarcosuchus'' from the Cretaceous of Africa". [[Science (journal).
  3. (2019-01-24). "Evolutionary structure and timing of major habitat shifts in Crocodylomorpha". Scientific Reports.
  4. (2002). "''Calsoyasuchus valliceps'', a new crocodyliform from the Early Jurassic Kayenta Formation of Arizona". [[Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology]].
  5. (2019-10-19). "The phylogenetic relationships of neosuchian crocodiles and their implications for the convergent evolution of the longirostrine condition". Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society.
  6. (March 2022). "How to date a crocodile: estimation of neosuchian clade ages and a comparison of four time-scaling methods". Palaeontology.
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