Ichthyopterygia

Ichthyopterygians
Temporal range: Early Triassic - Late Cretaceous
Utatsusaurus
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
clade: Neodiapsida
Superorder: Ichthyopterygia
Owen, 1840
Subgroups

Ichthyopterygia ("fish flippers") was a designation introduced by Sir Richard Owen in 1840 to designate the Jurassic ichthyosaurs that were known at the time, but the term is now used more often for both true Ichthyosauria and their more primitive early and middle Triassic ancestors.[1][2]

Basal ichthyopterygians (prior to and ancestral to true Ichthyosauria) were mostly small (a meter or less in length) with elongate bodies and long spool shaped vertebrae, indicating that they swam in a sinuous eel-like manner. This allowed for quick movements and maneuverability that were an advantage in shallow-water hunting.[3] Even at this early stage they were already very specialised animals with proper flippers, and would have been incapable of movement on land.

These animals seem to have been widely distributed around the coast of the northern half of Pangea, as they are known the Late Olenekian and Early Anisian (early part of the Triassic period) of Japan, China, Canada, and Spitsbergen (Norway). By the later part of the Middle Triassic they were extinct, having been replaced by their descendents the true ichthyosaurs.

Contents

Taxonomy

Phylogeny

Cladogram after Motani (1998, 1999) and Nicholls & Manabe (2001):

1 

Sauria


 2 

?Hupehsuchus



?Thaisaurus



Utatsusaurus



Parvinatator


 3 

Grippidae


 4 

?Mikadocephalus



?Wimanius



Cymbospondylus


 void 

Mixosauridae


 5 
 void 

?Mixosaurus


 void 

?Cymbospondylus



Shastasauridae




 6 

Toretocnemidae


 void 

Californosaurus


 7 

Macgowania


 void 

Hudsonelpidia


 void 

Suevoleviathan


 void 

Temnodontosaurus



Eurhinosauridae


 8 

?Chacaicosaurus



Stenopterygius


 void 

Ichthyosaurus



Ophthalmosauridae
















1 Neodiapsida, 2 Ichthyopterygia, 3 Eoichthyosauria, 4 Ichthyosauria, 5 Merriamosauria, 6 Euichthyosauria, 7 Parvipelvia, 8 Thunnosauria

References

  1. ^ Motani, R. (1997). "Temporal and spatial distribution of tooth implantation in ichthyosaurs". In J. M. Callaway and E. L. Nicholls (eds.). Ancient Marine Reptiles. Academic Press. pp. 81–103. 
  2. ^ Motani, R.; Minoura, N.; and Ando, T. (1998). "Ichthyosaurian relationships illuminated by new primitive skeletons from Japan". Nature 393 (6682): 255–257. doi:10.1038/30473. 
  3. ^ Motani, R. (2000). "Rulers of the Jurassic Seas". Scientific American 283 (6): 52–9. PMID 11103459. 

General references

  • Ellis, Richard, (2003) Sea Dragons - Predators of the Prehistoric Oceans. University Press of Kansas
  • McGowan, C & Motani, R. (2003) Ichthyopterygia, Handbook of Paleoherpetology, Part 8, Verlag Dr. Friedrich Pfeil

External links