Everything about The Pelycosaur totally explained
The
pelycosaurs (from
Greek pelyx meaning 'bowl' and
sauros meaning 'lizard') were primitive Late
Paleozoic synapsid amniotes. Some species were quite large and could grow up to 3 meters or more, although most species were much smaller.
Evolutionary history
The pelycosaurs appeared during the
Late Carboniferous and reached their acme in the
early part of the Permian Period, remaining the dominant land animals for some 40 millions of years. A few continued into the
late Permian. They were succeeded by their descendants, the
therapsids, which had a short but successful reign before the
Permian–Triassic extinction event, giving a chance for the
archosaur reptiles to take over in the Triassic.
Characteristics
At least two pelycosaur
clades independently evolved a tall sail, consisting of elongated vertebral spines: the
edaphosaurids and the
sphenacodontids. In life, this would have been covered by skin, and possibly functioned as a
thermoregulatory device or for mating display. Pelycosaur fossils have been found mainly in
Europe and
North America, although some small, late-surviving forms are known from
Russia and
South Africa.
Unlike most
reptiles, pelycosaurs lacked epidermal
scales. Fossil evidence from some ophiacodonts shows that the skin was naked, and that the belly was covered in
dermal "scales", the same type of scales possessed by early
tetrapods, unrealted to reptile scales, which evolved independently and are a different type of structure.
In
1940 the group was reviewed in detail and every species known at the time described (and many illustrated) in an important monograph by
Alfred Sherwood Romer and
Llewellyn Price.
Pelycosauria is a
paraphyletic taxon because it excludes the
therapsids. For that reason the term isn't used in some modern books.
Eupelycosauria is used to designate the clade that includes most Pelycosaurs along with the Therapsida and the Mammals. In contrast to "Pelycosaurs", this is
monophyletic group.
Caseasauria refers to a pelycosaur side-branch or clade that didn't leave any descendants.
The pelycosaurs appear to have been a group of synapsids that had direct ancestral links with the mammalia, having differentiated teeth and a developing hard palate.
Well-known pelycosaurs include the
genera Dimetrodon,
Sphenacodon,
Edaphosaurus, and
Ophiacodon.
Systematics
paraphyletic--that is, it's a grouping of animals that doesn't contain all descendants of a common ancestor, as is often required by a different system of naming organisms,
phylogenetic nomenclature. In the later, Pelycosauria is treated as a clade rather than a taxon with the rank "order", and includes the clade
Therapsida, which in turn contains the clade
Mammalia. In traditional taxonomy, Therapsida is separated from Pelycosauria in its own biological order, and mammals are separated from both as their own class.
Taxonomy
Phylogeny
In phylogenetic nomenclature, the "Pelycosauria" isn't used, since it doesn't constitute a
clade (a group of organisms descended from one common ancestor and including all the descendants of that ancestor) because the group excludes the therapsids. Instead, it represents a
paraphyletic "grade" of basal synapsids leading up to the clade Therapsida. The following
cladogram follows the one found on
Mikko's Phylogeny Archive
.
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Further Information
Get more info on 'Pelycosaur'.
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