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Re: [dinosaur] Longirostrine crocodylomorph head and snout functional evolution (free pdf)



A press release:

Untangling the evolution of feeding strategies in ancient crocodiles

http://www.bristol.ac.uk/news/2019/march/crocodile-feeding-evolution.html

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On Fri, Mar 29, 2019 at 8:26 AM Ben Creisler <bcreisler@gmail.com> wrote:

Ben Creisler
bcreisler@gmail.com


A new paper with free pdf:



Antonio Ballell, Benjamin C. Moon, Laura B. Porro, Michael J. Benton & Emily J. Rayfield (2019)
Convergence and functional evolution of longirostry in crocodylomorphs.
Palaeontology (advance online publication)

Free pdf:

Data archiving statement: Data and supporting information for this study are available in the Dryad Digital Repository: https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.b3s4v0g.

During the Mesozoic, Crocodylomorpha had a much higher taxonomic and morphological diversity than today. Members of one particularly successful clade, Thalattosuchia, are wellâknown for being longirostrine: having long, slender snouts. It has generally been assumed that Thalattosuchia owed their success in part to the evolution of longirostry, leading to a feeding ecology similar to that of the living Indian gharial, Gavialis. Here, we compare form and function of the skulls of the thalattosuchian Pelagosaurus and Gavialis using digital reconstructions of the skull musculoskeletal anatomy and finite element models to show that they had different jaw muscle arrangements and biomechanical behaviour. Additionally, the relevance of feedingârelated mandibular traits linked to longirostry in the radiation of crocodylomorph clades was investigated by conducting an evolutionary rates analysis under the variable rates model. We find that, even though Pelagosaurus and Gavialis share similar patterns of stress distribution in their skulls, the former had lower mechanical resistance. This suggests that compared to Gavialis, Pelagosaurus was unable to process large, mechanically less tractable prey, instead operating as a specialized piscivore that fed on softer and smaller prey. Secondly, innovation of feeding strategies was achieved by rate acceleration of functional characters of the mandible, a key mechanism for the diversification of certain clades like thalattosuchians and eusuchians. Different rates of functional evolution suggest divergent diversification dynamics between teleosaurids and metriorhynchids in the Jurassic.


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