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Tritylodont

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Tritylodonts
Temporal range: Upper Triassic – mid Cretaceous
Oligokyphus
Scientific classification
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Tritylodontidae

Cope, 1884
Skull of Kayentatherium
teeth from Kayentatherium

Tritylodonts [1] were small to medium-sized mammal-like cynodonts. They varied in size from a rabbit to a beaver.[2]

They were the last family of the non-mammalian synapsids. One of the last cynodont lines to appear, the family Tritylodontidae descended from a Cynognathus-like cynodont. Their teeth had three cusps (bumps) which gave them their name.

The tritylodonts were herbivorous, chewing through vegetation, such as stems, leaves, and roots. Tritylodonts have no canine teeth, just incisors and cheek teeth. The jaw worked by grinding forward and backwards, shredding the food between the ridges of the teeth.[2]

They were the longest surviving of all the non-mammalian therapsids. They appeared in the latest Triassic period, and persisted through the Jurassic until the middle of the Cretaceous.[3] This shows that the tritylodonts were a successful group of therapsids, even though they lived right beneath the ruling dinosaurs' feet, so to speak.

It is very clear that the tritylodonts were warm-blooded.[4] The tritylodont fossils were found in the Americas, South Africa, and Eurasia. They may have managed to live worldwide, including Antarctica.

There are quite a few parallels between these tritylodonts (which are outside the mammal line) and multituberculates, which are mammals. The tritylodonts had no competition in the Jurassic, because all the other mammal-like types were either carnivores or insectivores. Kermack's conclusion is that when the multituberculates appeared (middle Jurssic) they were in direct competition, and eventually they out-competed the earlier group, and replaced it.[2]

References

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  1. named after the shape of animal's teeth, with three cusps.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Kermack D.M. & K.A. 1984. The evolution of mammalian characters. London: Croom Helm, 40–44. ISBN 0-7099-1534-9
  3. Ruta M; Botha-Brink J; Mitchell S.A. & Benton M.J. 2013. The radiation of cynodonts and the ground plan of mammalian morphological diversity. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 280 (1769). [1]
  4. Hopson J.A. 2012. The role of foraging mode in the origin of therapsids: implications for the origin of mammalian endothermy. In Studies in vertebrate paleobiology: essays in honor of John R. Bolt, eds Lombard R.E. et al pp. 126–148. Fieldiana: Life and Earth Sciences 5. Chicago, IL: The Field Museum of Natural History.