A comprehensive phylogeny and revised taxonomy of Diadectomorpha with a discussion on the origin of tetrapod herbivory

Author:

Ponstein Jasper123ORCID,MacDougall Mark J.2ORCID,Fröbisch Jörg12

Affiliation:

1. Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Unter den Linden 6 , 10117 Berlin, Germany

2. Museum für Naturkunde Berlin, Invalidenstraße 43 , 10115 Berlin, Germany

3. Oertijdmuseum, Bosscheweg 80 , 5283 WB Boxtel, The Netherlands

Abstract

Among terrestrial tetrapods, the origin of herbivory marked a key evolutionary event that allowed for the evolution of modern terrestrial ecosystems. A 100 Ma gap separates the oldest terrestrial tetrapods and the first undisputed herbivorous tetrapods. While four clades of early tetrapod herbivores are undisputed amniotes, the phylogenetic position of Diadectomorpha with respect to Amniota has long been controversial. Given that the origin of herbivory coincides with the oldest amniotes, and obligate herbivory is unknown within amphibians, this suggests that a key adaptation necessary to evolve obligate herbivory is unique to amniotes. Historically, phylogenetic analyses have found Diadectomorpha as the sister-group to amniotes, but recent analyses recover Diadectomorpha as sister-group to Synapsida, within Amniota. We tested whether diadectomorphs are amniotes by updating the most recent character–taxon matrix. Specifically, we added new characters from the lower jaw and added diadectomorph taxa, resulting in a dataset of 341 characters and 61 operational taxonomic units. We updated the description of five diadectomorph jaws using microcomputed tomography data. Our majority-rule consensus places Diadectomorpha as sister-group to Synapsida; other methods do not recover this relationship. We revise diadectomorph taxonomy, erecting a new species from the early Permian Bromacker locality, Germany, and a new genus to accommodate ‘ Diadectes’ sanmiguelensis .

Funder

Federal Ministry of Education and Research

Elsa-Neumann Stipendium

Publisher

The Royal Society

Reference116 articles.

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2. Hotton N , Olson EC , Beerbower R . 1997 Amniote origins and the discovery of herbivory. In Amniote origins: completing the transition to land (eds SS Sumida , KLM Martin ), pp. 207–264. San Diego, CA: Academic Press.

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4. Herbivory in late Paleozoic and Triassic terrestrial vertebrates

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