Author:
SZCZYGIELSKI Tomasz,SŁOWIAK Justyna
Abstract
Shell suture obliteration (ankylosis) was exceptionally frequent in the earliest turtles, in contrast to post-Triassic taxa. Since modern turtles grow mostly along sutures, early ankylosis in Triassic taxa is intriguing. The Triassic turtle Proterochersis porebensis Szczygielski & Sulej, 2016 is known from numerous specimens, allowing observation of shell microstructure changes during ontogeny. Shell ankylosis occurred seemingly randomly in individuals of variable size, including small and morphologically juvenile, and completely obscured the initial bony composition. We propose that this phenomenon in the Triassic turtles can be an effect of early evolutionary stages of shell histogenesis and physiological mechanisms still used in shell regeneration in modern species. We also describe some parallels between the unusual peripheral microstructure of another Triassic turtle, Waluchelys cavitesta Sterli, Martínez, Cerda & Apaldetti, 2020, and Proterochersis porebensis. Microstructural changes imply that Proterochersis porebensis could change habitat during ontogeny, small individuals appearing more aquatic and larger more terrestrial.
Publisher
Museum National D'Histoire Naturelle
Cited by
4 articles.
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1. Natural external plastron mold of the Triassic turtle Proterochersis: An unusual mode of preservation;PLOS ONE;2024-03-29
2. Limb histology of the Triassic stem turtles Proterochersis porebensis Szczygielski & Sulej, 2016 and Proganochelys quenstedtii Baur, 1887 with insights into growth patterns of early turtles;Comptes Rendus Palevol;2023-11-06
3. Limb anatomy of the Triassic turtles: appendicular osteology of Proterochersis (Testudinata, Proterochersidae);Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society;2023-07-25
4. A new Middle Triassic vertebrate assemblage from Miedary (southern Poland)Citation for this article: Czepiński, Ł, Pawlak, W., Rytel, A., Tałanda, M., Szczygielski, T., & Sulej, T. (2023) A new Middle Triassic vertebrate assemblage from Miedary (southern Poland).
Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology
. https://doi.org/10.1080/02724634.2023.2265445;Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology;2023-03-04