Eupelycosauria

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Eupelycosauria
Fossil range: Late Carboniferous to Late Permian (non-mammalian)
Edaphosaurus, a Eupelycosaurian
Edaphosaurus, a Eupelycosaurian
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Synapsida
Order: Pelycosauria
(unranked) Eupelycosauria
Kemp, 1982
Families and Clades

The Eupelycosauria originally referred to a suborder of Pelycosaurs (Reisz 1987), but has been redefined (Laurin and Reisz 1997) to designate a clade of synapsids that includes most pelycosaurs, as well as all therapsids and mammals. They first appear during the Early Pennsylvanian epoch (i.e: Archaeothyris, and perhaps an even earlier genus, Protoclepsydrops), and represent just one of the many stages in the acquiring of mammal-like characteristics (Kemp 1982), in contrast to their earlier amniote ancestors. The defining characteristics which separate these animals from the Caseasauria (also Pelycosaurs) are based on details of proportion of certain bones of the skull. These include a long, narrow supratemporal bone (in contrast to caseasaurs where this bone is almost as wide as it is long), and a frontal bone with a wider connection to the upper margin of the orbit (Laurin and Reisz 1997).

Contents

[edit] Evolution

Many non-therapsid Eupelycosaurs were the dominant land animals from the latest Carboniferous to the end of the early Permian epoch. Ophiacodontids were common since their appearance, from late Carboniferous (Pennsylvanian) to early Permian, but they became progressively smaller as early Permian went by. The Edaphosaurids, along with the Caseids, were the dominant herbivores in the early part of Permian, ranging from the size of a pig to the size of rhinoceroses. The most renowned Edaphosaurid is Edaphosaurus, a large (10 - 12 ft long) herbivore which had a sail on its back, probably used for regulating heat and mating. Sphenacodontids, a family of carnivorous eupelycosaurs, included the famous Dimetrodon, which is sometimes mistaken for a dinosaur, and was the largest predator of the period. Like Edaphosaurus, Dimetrodon also had a distinctive sail on its back, and it probably served the same purpose - regulating heat. The Varanopseid family somewhat resembled today's monitor lizards and may have had the same lifestyle. [1]

Therapsids descended from a clade closely related to the Sphenacodontids. They became the succeeding dominant land animals for the rest of the Permian and in the later part of the Triassic, therapsids gave rise to the first mammals. All non-therapsid pelycosaurs, as well as many other life forms, became extinct at the end of Permian period.

See also: Evolution of mammals

[edit] Taxonomy

[edit] Classification

[edit] References

  1. ^ Paleos Synapsida

[edit] External links