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Dinosaur Genera List corrections #168
There has been some discussion recently on the Dinosaur Mailing List about
the classification of the Late Triassic Shuvosaurus inexpectatus, described
by Sankar Chatterjee in 1993. Recall that he claimed it was a very early
member of the group Ornithomimosauria, based on the striking similarities of
the holotype skull to those of ornithomimosaurs. Subsequently, Murry & Long
(1995) argued that Shuvosaurus was not dinosaurian but another kind of
archosaur, and suggested that the skull represented cranial material of a
taxon they named Chatterjeea elegans, based only on postcranial material.
This seemed reasonable at the time, so I asterisked the genus Shuvosaurus in
the Dinosaur Genera List as a non-dinosaurian archosaur.
Now it appears, from studies by Oliver Rauhut for his doctoral dissertation,
that Shuvosaurus is a theropod after all. An email from Mickey Mortimer
explained (edited a bit): "The only reason Shuvosaurus was removed from the
Theropoda in the first place was because Long and Murry (1995) thought
Chatterjee didn't prove it was a theropod. They figured since no toothless
Triassic theropods were known, it was more likely to be the head of the
non-dinosaurian archosaur Chatterjeea, because like the non-dinosaurian
archosaur Lotosaurus from China, Shuvosaurus lacked teeth. But Rauhut has
proved Shuvosaurus is a theropod: âShuvosaurus differs from rauisuchians and
other basal crurotarsans in the following characters: loss of the
postfrontal, paroccipital process directed ventro-laterally, lacrimal
dorso-ventrally elongated, inverted L-shaped and exposed on the skull roof,
presence of a deep basisphenoid recess, and ectopterygoid with expanded
medial part and deep ventral fossa. All of these characters are found in
theropods, and the latter three probably represent synapomorphies for this
group (Gauthier 1986); therefore, Shuvosaurus can be referred to the
Theropoda.' So get it back on that list. :-)"
This does it for me. I've removed the asterisk and notation and reinstated
Shuvosaurus to dinosaurian status; always happy to have a prodigal dinosaur
return. As to what kind of theropod it is, I have rather little idea, since
we really need some postcranial material to help classify it. Perhaps
Chatterjee's family Shuvosauridae really does belong in the Ornithomimosauria
after all. If not, would that then make Shuvosaurus an ornithomimimimic?
(Actually, since Shuvosaurus is earliest, the ornithomimids were actually
shuvosaurimimics, and extant ratites are the ornithomimimimics!)
Genera count remains stable at 916.
The well-organized Dinosaur Mailing List archive can now be visited directly
from the Dinosaur Genera List. The link is in a short introductory paragraph
I recently added about the history of the DGL.