Batrachomorpha

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Batrachomorpha
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Subphylum: Vertebrata
(unranked) Sarcopterygii
Superclass: Tetrapoda
Class: Batrachomorpha
von Huene, 1956
Groups

Temnospondyli
Lissamphibia

Batrachomorpha ("Frog form") is a name given to recent and extinct amphibians that are not related to reptiles. The name was coined by Friedrich von Huene in 1956 to refer to a superorder of his subclass "Eutetrapoda" (the lower tetrapods exclusive of the Urodela) and included the orders Stegocephalia (here includes a number of Labyrinthodontia and Anura. This classification is no longer followed.

Michael Benton adopted the term Batrachomorpha in a cladistic sense to include all living amphibians, their common ancestor, and extinct relatives. This is suggested as a more precise term than "Amphibia", which is not diagnostic as it simply refers to all non-amniote tetrapods. However, the phylogenetic relationships of Paleozoic tetrapods have not yet been worked out with certainty, and the validity of the clade Batrachomorpha depends on where other amphibians and early amniotes fit on the evolutionary tree, and in some phylogenies the clade is redundant (e.g. Laurin 1996).

Batrachomorphs are distinguished by a number of features in the skeleton, including a flat or shallow skull, a fused skull roof with no cranial kinesis, exoccipital-postparietal contact on the occiput, and four or fewer fingers on the hand (Benton 2000 pp.98-99).

Dr Benton contrasts Batrachomorphs with Reptiliomorphs; both are stem-based clades, but the former constitutes the "amphibian" evolutionary radiation, the later the contemporary proto-reptilian and early amniote evolution.

In the appendix to Benton 2004 (which combines cladistic and linnaean rankings) Batrachomorpha is given the taxonomic rank of Class.

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