Bottosaurus is an extinct genus of alligatorid from the Late Cretaceous-Early Paleocene of New Jersey, Texas, and possibly North Carolina and South Carolina. Two species are currently accepted, with a third requiring re-evaluation.
Bottosaurus | |
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Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Reptilia |
Clade: | Archosauromorpha |
Clade: | Archosauriformes |
Order: | Crocodilia |
Family: | Alligatoridae |
Subfamily: | Caimaninae |
Genus: | †Bottosaurus Agassiz, 1849 |
Type species | |
†Bottosaurus harlani Agassiz, 1849
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Species | |
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Taxonomy and distribution
edit2010s phylogenetic studies have recovered Bottosaurus as a member of Alligatoridae within the subfamily Caimaninae, which indicates that Bottosaurus is more closely related to caimans than to alligators.[1][2]
Bottosaurus harlani is predominantly found from Late Cretaceous strata of Maastrichtian age, such as the Hornerstown Formation and New Jersey Greensands. New material has been reported from the Rhems and Williamsburg Formations of the Black Mingo Group of the South Carolina coastal plain that dates back to the Danian and Thanetian stages of the Paleocene epoch, suggesting that Bottosaurus had survived the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event and lived through much of the early Paleogene period.[3] However, this material is fragmentary, and referral to Bottosaurus should be treated as tentative.
Another species, Bottosaurus fustidens, has recently been described from the middle Paleocene (Tiffanian) of western Texas.[4] The species is based on substantial craniomandibular and postcranial material and more solidly places Bottosaurus on the younger side of the Cretaceous-Paleogene boundary.
Description
editBottosaurus had distinctively thick osteoderms that lacked the pitting of most other crocodylians. The unusual blunt, conical tribodont crushing teeth are the most common diagnostic material to fossilize and be recovered, although teeth from the posterior portion of the jaw tend to be more laterally compressed like those of other related crocodiles. The teeth had a "wrinkled" enamel surface and prominent annual rings with vertical ridges running down them. A short, massive lower jaw that is nearly circular in cross-section is evident from remains of the type species B. harlani. The linear frontoparietal suture between the supratemporal fenestrae indicates that Bottosaurus is related the caimans.[1]
References
edit- ^ a b Cossette, A. P.; Brochu, C. A. (15 October 2018). "A new specimen of the alligatoroid Bottosaurus harlani and the early history of character evolution in alligatorids". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 38 (4): (1)-(22). doi:10.1080/02724634.2018.1486321. S2CID 92801257.
- ^ Tobias Massonne; Davit Vasilyan; Márton Rabi; Madelaine Böhme (2019). "A new alligatoroid from the Eocene of Vietnam highlights an extinct Asian clade independent from extant Alligator sinensis". PeerJ. 7: e7562. doi:10.7717/peerj.7562. PMC 6839522. PMID 31720094.
- ^ Erickson, Bruce R. (1998). "Crocodilians of the Black Mingo Group (Paleocene) of the South Carolina Coastal Plain". Transactions of the American Philosophical Society. 88 (4): 196–214. doi:10.2307/1006674. JSTOR 1006674.
- ^ Cossette, Adam P. (October 2021). "A new species of Bottosaurus (Alligatoroidea: Caimaninae) from the Black Peaks Formation (Palaeocene) of Texas indicates an early radiation of North American caimanines". Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. 191 (1): 276–301. doi:10.1093/zoolinnean/zlz178.