Captorhinus

Captorhinus
Temporal range: early Cisuralian, 280–270.6 Ma
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Family: Captorhinidae
Genus: Captorhinus
Cope, 1895
Type species
Captorhinus aguti
Cope, 1895

Captorhinus is an extinct genus of captorhinid reptiles that lived during the Permian period. Its remains are known from North America, Europe, India and Africa.[1] In 1882, Edward Cope described a fragmentary skull from the Lower Permian of Texas collected by W. F. Cummins at Coffee Creek as Ectocynodon aguti. The name had then been revised several times by different paleontologists as more genera were discovered. In 1911, paleontologist Ermine Cowles Case revised the recently discovered species. He decided to refer P. (Ectodynodon) aguti, P. aduncus, and P. isolomus to Captorhinus, and established a new family, Captorhinidae.[2]

Etymology

Named by Cope from the Latin word, “captor,” meaning, “one who catches something,” and the Greek word, “rhino,” meaning, “of the nose.” This is based on the theory that the characteristically curved premaxilla of Captorhinus may have been used to catch prey.[3]

Geological & Environmental Information

Captorhinus is known from the Admiral, Belle Plains, Clyde, Arroyo, Vale, and possibly the Choza Formations, Lower Permian, of Texas.[4] The genus is also known from the Lower Permian fissure deposits at Richard’s Spur, Oklahoma, and the Cutler Formation, Rio Arriba County, New Mexico. The morphology of small captorhinids is best known from the vast amount of material collected near Fort Sill, Oklahoma. The majority of bones found belong to the multiple-tooth-rowed captorhinid, Captorhinus aguti. The fossils found are currently in the Oklahoma Museum of Natural History (OMNH). Two specimens held in the OMNH that have been part of the diagnostic process of these species are OMNH 52366, an almost complete right maxilla, and OMNH 52367, a partial right dentary. It is uncertain if the two elements belong to the same individual.[5] Another commonly mentioned captorhinid, Labidosaurus hamatus, was found in a Lower Permian geologic group in Texas, called the Clear Fork Group.[6] There is a skull and incomplete postcranial skeleton of Captorhinus in the possession of the American Museum of Natural History. Another significant specimen belongs to the Chicago Museum of Natural History taken from the Richard’s Spur, Oklahoma locality.[7]

Paleobiology and Description

Diet

Possible prey from the known fauna of the early Permian of both Texas and Oklahoma may have included other small amniotes, small dissorophid temnospondyls, and microsaurian lepospondyls. The comparatively small body size of basal captorhinids suggests that they were probably in competition for food with only the youngest of varanopids and sphenacodontids. These species most likely compromised the smallest carnivore guild among early Permian predators.[8]

Description

While there are several forms of Captorhinus, there are three main species that are the best known. The previously mentioned Captorhinus aguti is the type species of Captorhinus, but there is also a fair amount of material collected on Captorhinus magnus and Captorhinus laticeps.[9]

The most distinguishable trait of captorhinus is its namesake: the hooking of the snout from prominent ventral angulation of the premaxillary process. Other notable characteristics include the dorsally positioned alary process of the jugal on the medial surface and flushed with the orbital margin, the retroarticular process longer anteroposteriorly than broad, and the anteriormost dentary tooth strongly procumbent. The posterior teeth are either chisel-shaped or ogival. Until the late 1990s, Captorhinus was diagnosed by the presence of multiple rows of marginal teeth on the maxillary and dentary bones. However, single-rowed captorhinid elements have been discovered, proving this hypothesis incorrect.[10]

Captorhinus aguti

Although a subfamily of Captorhinidae, Moradisaurinae, also possessed multiple-tooth-rows, the best-known type species Captorhinus aguti clearly acquired multiple-rowed-teeth independently. In contrast to the teeth rows in moradisaurines, the C. aguti rows are oriented obliquely to the margins, where each row is followed posterolaterally by the next one.[11] The toothed areas of the maxilla and dentary are broader in C. aguti than in single-tooth-rowed captorhinids.

The vertebral structure in C. aguti is that commonly possessed by primitive reptiles. The centra are amphicoelous and notochordal, with swollen, relatively massive neural arches. The vertebral column is differentiated into presacral, sacral, and postsacral or caudal vertebrae.[12]

Similarly to extant reptiles, C. aguti has a functional “mesotarsal” joint. It divides the tarsus into a proximal and distal unit, where the centrale is linked mechanically to the proximal (astragalus-calcaneum) unit. The increased flexibility due to this multiple-jointed arrangement allowed for the articulations between the centrale and first three distal tarsals on the medial side of the mesotarsal joint to have mechanical independence from the lateral articulation between the astragalus-calcaneum and the fourth and fifth distal tarsals.[13] This is almost certainly closely correlated with the primitive sprawling step cycle.[14] Due to the shape of the distal femoral articulation, Captorhinus aguti would have had little capacity to compensate for lateral movement of the femur.[15]

Captorhinus magnus

Captorhinus magnus has thus far been identified from only the Richards Spur locality in Oklahoma, a site that also produced the remains of C. aguti. Fossils of C. magnus are found predominately in the deeper regions of the fissure complex, whereas in the upper, younger sediments of the fillings, C. magnus remains are extremely rate. This suggests the ecological replacement of C. magnus by the smaller, multiple-rowed C. aguti during the Early Permian.[16]

The skeletal elements of Captorhinus magnus possess a nearly identical morphology to those elements of Captorhinus aguti, with the lone exception of the size difference. Captorhinus magnus averaged about twice as large as C. aguti. Another important difference between the two species is that the teeth are arranged in a single row. Captorhinus magnus possesses ogival check teeth, where the distal tips of the teeth exhibit a triangular shape when viewed in anterior view. Unlike C. aguti, the femur of C. magnus possesses a concave proximal articular surface in both immature and mature individuals. This allows for distinction between similar-sized femora of C. aguti and C. magnus, regardless of the ontogenetic stage of the individuals preserved. Without the presence of the femur or a tooth-bearing element, it would prove difficult to distinguish between C. magnus and C. aguti, although the two can likely be differentiated with size as the sole criterion.[17]

Captorhinus laticeps

C. laticeps is distinguished from C. aguti by the lack of multiple tooth rows, but is very similar in all other aspects. Captorhinus laticeps is considerably smaller than C. magnus, and possesses chisel-shaped teeth instead of ogival teeth on the posterior portion of the maxilla and dentary.[18]

Gallery

Notes

  1. Seltin 1959
  2. Fox 1996
  3. Fox 1966
  4. Friedman 1996
  5. Modesto 1996
  6. Modesto 2007
  7. Gaffney 1979
  8. Kissel 2002
  9. Canoville 2010
  10. Kissel 2002
  11. Fox 1966
  12. Fox 1966
  13. Kissel 2002
  14. Holmes 2003
  15. Kissel 2002
  16. Kissel 2002
  17. Kissel 2002
  18. Kissel 2002

References

  1. Fox, Richard C.; Bowman, Merton C. (January 31, 1966). "Osteology and Relationships of Captorhinus Aguti (Cope) (Reptilia: Captorhinomorpha)". The University of Kansas Paleontological Institute s. Vertebrata (Article 11): 1–79.
  2. Gaffney, Eugene S.; Mc Kenna, Malcolm C. (October 30, 1979). "A Late Permian Captorhinid from Rhodesia" (PDF). American Museum Novitates (2688): 1–15. Retrieved 22 February 2015.
  3. Kissel, Richard A.; Dilkes, David W.; Reisz, Robert R. (September 1, 2002). "Captorhinus magnus, a new captorhinid (Amniota: Eureptilia) from the Lower Permian of Oklahoma, with new evidence on the homology of the astragalus". Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 39: 1363–1372. doi:10.1139/e02-040.
  4. Holmes, Robert B. (April 1, 2003). "The hind limb of Captohinus aguti and the step cycle of basal amniotes". Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 40: 515–526. doi:10.1139/e02-039.
  5. Modesto, Sean P.; Scott, Diane M.; Berman, David S.; Muller, Johannes; Reisz, Robert R. (February 1, 2007). "The skull and the palaeoecological significance of Labidosaurus hamatus, a captorhinid reptile from the Lower Permian of Texas". Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 149: 237–262. doi:10.1111/j.1096-3642.2007.00242.x.
  6. Seltin, Richard J. (October 22, 1959). "A Review of the Family Captorhinidae". Fieldiana: Geology 10 (34): 461–505.
  7. Canoville, Aurore; Laurin, Michel (June 1, 2010). "Evolution of humeral microanatomy and lifestyle in amniotes, and some comments on palaeobiological inferences". Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 100: 384–406. doi:10.1111/j.1095-8312.2010.01431.x.
  8. Modesto, S. P. (February 1996). "A Basal Captorhinid Reptile from the Fort Sill Fissures, Lower Permian of Oklahoma". Oklahoma Geology 56 (1): 4–14.
  9. Friedman, Gerald M. (February 1996). "A Note on Metamorphism in the World's Deepest Boreholes in Sedimentary Strata: Anadarko Basin, Oklahoma". Oklahoma Geology 56 (1): 15–17.
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