(paleontology) An order of Mesozoic marine reptiles in the subclass Euryapsida.
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(paleontology) An order of Mesozoic marine reptiles in the subclass Euryapsida.
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An infraclass of Mesozoic reptiles that are, without exception, adapted to the marine environment. The infraclass includes the nothosaurs, plesiosaurs, and placodonts. These reptiles, along with the ichthyosaurs, played a significant role as predators within the marine animal community of the Mesozoic Era.
The placodonts are a distinctive but highly varied assemblage of aquatic reptiles. They had short bodies, paddlelike limbs, and flat cheek teeth designed for crushing hard-shelled prey. The genus Helodus was covered by a dorsal bony armor and a roofing of dermal scutes, but most other genera lacked armor. Placodonts have come only from rocks of the Middle and Upper Triassic of Europe, North Africa, and the Middle East. See also Placodontia.
The Nothosauria are the relatively generalized stem group from which the plesiosaurs evolved. With the exception of a single New World species and a record from Japan, nothosaurs are known primarily from Europe and the Near East (Israel) in rocks of Triassic age. The nothosaurs are notably diverse in the mode and degree of secondary aquatic modification. The directions of aquatic specialization involve shortening, or more often lengthening, of the neck; enlargement of the orbits or the temporal fenestrae; and reduction, or more commonly increase, in the number of phalanges in manus (hand), pes (foot), or both. A feature of considerable evolutionary significance in the light of plesiosaurian differentiation is the great individual variability in the number of presacral vertebrae (32–42) in Pachypleurosaurus edwardsi.
The Plesiosauria are the successful, compact, and highly specialized offshoot of the nothosaurs that attained worldwide distribution. The early steps of aquatic adaptation, initiated by the nothosaurs, have led to extensive anatomical modifications: The region comprising chest and abdomen became short, stout, and inflexible; the ventral bones of shoulder girdle and pelvis increased in area enormously; and the limbs, transformed into large flippers, became the principal organs of propulsion. Two major trends of plesiosaur evolution may be discerned since the Early Jurassic: In the one group there was a tendency toward a shortening of the neck from 27 to 13 vertebrae and an increase in skull size: in the other group the opposite trend led to forms of bizarre body proportions, for example, Elasmosaurus, with a neck containing 76 vertebrae. The plesiosaurs were carnivorous.
The precise affinities of placodonts, nothosaurs, and plesiosaurs remain uncertain. No earlier group of reptiles from which they might have come is known, and they left no descendants. See also Nothosauria; Placodontia; Plesiosauria; Reptilia.
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The noun has one meaning:
Meaning #1:
extinct marine reptiles: plesiosaurs; nothosaurs
Synonym: order Sauropterygia
| Wikipedia: Sauropterygia |
| Sauropterygians Fossil range: Early Triassic - Late Cretaceous |
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|---|---|
| Reconstruction of the plesiosaurian Thalassiodracon | |
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Animalia |
| Phylum: | Chordata |
| Class: | Reptilia |
| Superorder: | †Sauropterygia Owen, 1860 |
| Orders | |
Sauropterygia ("lizard flippers") is a group of very successful aquatic reptiles that flourished during the Age of the Dinosaurs before they became extinct. They are united by a radical adaptation of their shoulder, designed to support powerful flipper strokes. Some later sauropterygians like the pliosaurs developed a similar mechanism in their pelvis.
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The earliest sauropterygians appeared about 245 million years ago (Ma), at the start of the Triassic period. Early examples were small (around 60 cm), semi-aquatic lizard-like animals with long limbs (pachypleurosaurs), but they quickly grew to be several meters long and spread into shallow waters (nothosaurs). The Triassic-Jurassic extinction event wiped them all out except for the plesiosaurs. During the Early Jurassic these diversified quickly into both long-necked small-headed plesiosaurs proper, and short-necked large-headed pliosaurs. Originally it was thought that plesiosaurs and pliosaurs were two distinct superfamilies that followed separate evolutionary paths. It now seems that these were simply morphotypes in that both types evolved a number of times, with some pliosaurs evolving from plesiosaur ancestors, and vice-versa.
Each morphotype filled a specific ecological role. The large pliosaurs, like the Jurassic Rhomaleosaurus, Liopleurodon and Pliosaurus, and the Cretaceous Kronosaurus and Brachauchenius, were the superpredators of the Mesozoic seas, around 7 to 12 meters in length, and filled a similar ecological role to that of killer whales today. The long-necked plesiosaurs, meanwhile, included both those with medium-long necks, like the 3 to 5 meter-long Plesiosauridae and the Cryptoclididae, and the Jurassic and Cretaceous Elasmosauridae, which evolved progressively longer and more flexible necks, so that by the middle and late Cretaceous the entire animal was over 13 meters in length (e.g. Elasmosaurus), although as most of this was the neck, the actual body size was much smaller than that of the larger pliosaurs. These long-necked forms undoubtedly fed on fish, which they probably snared in their tooth-lined jaws with rapid lunges of the neck and head.
The sauropterygians thrived throughout the Mesozoic. However, despite their success they became extinct along with the non-avian dinosaurs, pterosaurs and mosasaurs during the end Cretaceous mass extinction.
Classification is difficult because the demands of the aquatic environment caused the same characteristics to evolve multiple times, illustrating convergent evolution. While sauropterygians are considered diapsids, they are also sometimes classified with turtles. The bulky-bodied, mollusc-eating placodonts may also be sauropterygians. In addition to the modifications of the shoulder, the group is also united by several modifications in their skulls.
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| Nothosauria (paleontology) | |
| Plesiosauria (paleontology) | |
| sauropterygian |
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