Pantestudines

Pantestudines
Temporal range: Late Triassic - Holocene, 240–0 Ma

Possible mid-Permian record[1]

Fossil specimen of Odontochelys semitestacea
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Clade: Sauria
Clade: Pantestudines
Klein, 1760
Subgroups

Pantestudines is the group of all tetrapods more closely related to turtles than to any other animals. It includes both modern turtles (Testudines) and all of their extinct relatives (also known as stem-turtles).[2]

Classification

The identity of the ancestors and closest relatives of the turtle lineage was a longstanding scientific mystery, though new discoveries and better analyses in the early 21st century began to clarify turtle relationships. Analysis of fossil data has shown that turtles are diapsid reptiles, most closely related either to the archosaurs (crocodiles, bird, and relatives) or the lepidosaurs (lizards, tuatara, and relatives). Genetic analysis strongly favors the hypothesis that turtles are the closest relatives of the archosaurs, though studies using only fossil evidence often continue to recover them as relatives of lepidosaurs. Studies using only fossils, as well as studies using a combination of fossil and genetic evidence, both suggest that sauropterygians, the group of prehistoric marine reptiles including the plesiosaurs and the often superficially turtle-like placodonts, are themselves stem-turtles.[1]

The cladogram shown below follows the most likely result found by an analysis of turtle relationships using both fossil and genetic evidence by M.S. Lee, in 2013. This study found Eunotosaurus, usually regarded as a turtle relative, to be only very distantly related to turtles in the clade Parareptilia.[3]

Sauria  (=Ankylopoda)

Lepidosauromorpha


 Archosauromorpha  (=Archelosauria)


Choristodera





Trilophosaurus



Rhynchosauria




Archosauriformes




 Pantestudines 

Eosauropterygia




Placodontia




Sinosaurosphargis




Odontochelys


 Testudinata 

Proganochelys



Testudines









The cladogram below follows the most likely result found by another analysis of turtle relationships, this one using only fossil evidence, published by Rainer Schoch and Hans-Dieter Sues in 2015. This study found Eunotosaurus to be an actual early stem-turtle, though other versions of the analysis found weak support for it as a parareptile.[1]

Sauria  (=Archelosauria)

Archosauromorpha


 Lepidosauromorpha  (=Ankylopoda)



Kuehneosauridae


Lepidosauria

Squamata



Rhynchocephalia




 Pantestudines 
Sauropterygia

Eosauropterygia




Sinosaurosphargis



Placodontia






Eunotosaurus




Pappochelys




Odontochelys


 Testudinata 

Proganochelys



Testudines










References

  1. 1 2 3 Schoch, Rainer R.; Sues, Hans-Dieter (24 June 2015). "A Middle Triassic stem-turtle and the evolution of the turtle body plan". Nature. doi:10.1038/nature14472. (subscription required (help)).
  2. Joyce, W. G., Parham, J. F., & Gauthier, J. A. (2004). "Developing a protocol for the conversion of rank-based taxon names to phylogenetically defined clade names, as exemplified by turtles." Journal of Paleontology, 78(5): 989-1013.
  3. Lee, M. S. Y. (2013). "Turtle origins: Insights from phylogenetic retrofitting and molecular scaffolds". Journal of Evolutionary Biology 26 (12): 2729. doi:10.1111/jeb.12268.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, October 17, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.