Ictidorhinus
Ictidorhinus is an extinct genus of biarmosuchian therapsids.[1] Fossils have been found from the Dicynodon Assemblage Zone of the Beaufort Group in the Karoo Basin, South Africa and are of Late Permian age. It had a short snout and proportionally large orbits. These characteristics may be representative of a juvenile animal, possibly of Lycaenodon. However, these two genera are not known to have existed at the same time, making it unlikely for Ictidorhinus material to be from a juvenile form of Lycaenodon.[2]
Ictidorhinus Temporal range: Late Permian | |
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Life restoration of Ictidorhinus martinsi | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Clade: | Synapsida |
Clade: | Therapsida |
Suborder: | †Biarmosuchia |
Family: | †Ictidorhinidae Broom, 1932 |
Genus: | †Ictidorhinus Broom, 1913 |
Type species | |
†Ictidorhinus martinsi Broom, 1913 |
Ictidorhinus is the best-known representative of the family Ictidorhinidae, named by South African paleontologist Robert Broom in 1932. Many biarmosuchians have been identified as ictidorhinids since the family was first named, mostly on the basis of their small size. Several biarmosuchians from Russia have been classified as ictidorhinids on the basis of partial jaw bones alone. Recent phylogenetic studies of biarmosuchians have found that Ictidorhinidae is a paraphyletic collection of species that fall outside the more derived clade Burnetiamorpha.[3]
See also
References
- Boonstra, L. D. (1952). Die gorgonopsiër-geslag, Hipposaurus, en die familie, Ictidorhinidae. Tydstrif vir Wetenskap en Kuns 12:142-149.
- Sidor, C. A. and Rubidge, B. S. (2006). Herpetoskylax hopsoni, a new biarmosuchian (Therapsida: Biarmosuchia) from the Beaufort Group in South Africa. In: Matthew T. Carrano, Timothy J. Gaudin, Richard W. Blob and John R. Wible, eds., Amniote Paeobiology. Chicago. University of Chicago Press. pp. 96.
- Sidor, C. A. (2003). "The Naris and Palate of Lycaenodon Longiceps (Therapsida: Biarmosuchia), with Comments on Their Early Evolution in the Therapsida". Journal of Paleontology. 77 (5): 977–984. doi:10.1666/0022-3360(2003)077<0977:TNAPOL>2.0.CO;2.