Integrative paleophysiology of the metriorhynchoid Pelagosaurus typus (Pseudosuchia, Thalattosuchia)

Author:

Cubo Jorge1ORCID,Sena Mariana V. A.1ORCID,Pellarin Romain1,Faure‐Brac Mathieu G.2ORCID,Aubier Paul1,Cheyron Cassandra1,Jouve Stéphane1,Allain Ronan3,Jalil Nour‐Eddine3

Affiliation:

1. Sorbonne Université, Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, CNRS, Centre de Recherche en Paléontologie—Paris (CR2P, UMR 7207) Paris France

2. Naturhistorisk Museum, Universitetet i Oslo, Norsk Senter for Paleontologi Oslo Norway

3. Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, Sorbonne Université, CNRS, Centre de Recherche en Paléontologie—Paris (CR2P, UMR 7207) Paris France

Abstract

AbstractPaleophysiology is an emergent discipline. Organismic (integrative) approaches seem more appropriate than studies focusing on the variation of specific features because traits are tightly related in actual organisms. Here, we used such an organismic approach (including lifestyle, thermometabolism, and hunting behavior) to understand the paleobiology of the lower Jurassic (Toarcian) thalattosuchian metriorhynchoid Pelagosaurus typus. First, we show that the lifestyle (aquatic, amphibious, terrestrial) has an effect on the femoral compactness profiles in amniotes. The profile of Pelagosaurus indicates that it was amphibious, with a foraging activity in shallow marine environments (as suggested by the presence of salt glands) and thermoregulatory basking behavior in land (as suggested by the presence of osteoderms with highly developed ornamentation). As for the thermometabolism, we show that the mass‐independent resting metabolic rate of Pelagosaurus is relatively high compared to the sample of extant ectothermic amniotes, but analysis of vascular canal diameter and inferences of red blood cell size refute the hypothesis suggesting incipient endothermy. Finally, the foraging behavior was inferred using two proxies. Pelagosaurus had a mass‐independent maximum metabolic rate and an aerobic scope higher than those measured in the almost motionless Iguana iguana, similar to those measured in the sit‐and‐wait predator Crocodylus porosus but lower than those quantified in the active hunter Varanus gouldii. These results suggest that Pelagosaurus may have had a hunting behavior involving a slow sustained swimming or a patient waiting in shallow waters, and may have caught preys like gharials, using fast sideways sweeping motions of the head.

Publisher

Wiley

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