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| Taxonomy | Phylogeny - note that many of these early forms are scrappy and their relationships poorly known |
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`--+- (Lewisuchidae)
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`--+- (or Saurischia/Theropoda)
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Lagosuchidae: Marasuchus (= Lagosuchus).
Range: Middle Triassic of South America.
Phylogeny: Dinosauriformes: Dinosauria + *.
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- Small (<0.5m), gracile, bipedal proto-dinosaurs.
- Elongated snout with numerous, small teeth.
- Long, S-shaped neck.
- sharply regionalized (i.e. cervical, ant. dorsal, post. dorsal, & caudal).
- Spines of dorsal vertebrae may incline anteriorly (said to be associated with saltatorial habit);
- Acetabular fenestration minor or absent.
- Posterior limbs much longer than anterior.
- longer than femur.
- Head of femur points toward midline, but femur may be somewhat sigmoid ().
- Fibula reduced sharply, limiting rotation at knee.
- Calcaneum reduced relative to astragalus.
- Calcaneal heel absent;
- Dinosaur-like mesotarsal hinge between astragalus & calcaneum and between proximal and distal tarsals.
- Proximal tarsals not integrated with crus.
- Metatarsals II-IV very long & closely appressed.
- 5th digit not hooked; fully erect posture.
- Very likely obligate bipeds.
- May have line of dorsal scutes.
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The literal meaning of "lagosuchid" is, as Robert Bakker is fond of pointing out, "rabbit-croc." It would be interesting to know if they were actually saltorial, that is jumpers, like rabbits. The ability to use jumping as a routine means of locomotion leaves its mark on the skeleton, but the indications in the Lagosuchidae are ambiguous. Some common indications of a jumping animal are as follows:
- Elongation and fusion of the phalanges (toe bones) and metatarsals (foot bones). Here, the toes and metatarsals are quite long, but there is no evidence of fusion.
- Hind limbs 2-4 times as long as front limbs. Lagosuchids are marginal.
- Center of gravity shifted posteriorly. Its hard to tell from skeletal remains alone. Perhaps the answer is "somewhat." The pelvis, in particular, suggests a design which maximizes the amount of posterior mass. However, this is not nearly the same degree of back-heaviness seen in a frog, rabbit, or kangaroo.
- Small head or stiffened or fused cervical spine. The head is not well known for any lagosuchid. Marasuchus, at least seems to have had a relatively small head and the cervical vertebrae are notably longer and deeper than the dorsal vertebrae, suggesting that the neck was less laterally flexible and may have been tightly bound with tendons. This impression is reinforced (as was the neck) by the presence of fairly long cervical ribs.
On the whole it seems likely that Lagosuchids were accomplished jumpers, although perhaps not as specialized for this locomotor style as rabbits. A reasonable speculation might be that they were ambush predators who used a leaping attack, but did not use repeated jumping in routine locomotion. The latter style is referred to as "ricochetal." The efficiency of ricochetal locomotion (which is very high) depends on the ability to store the kinetic energy of one leap and to use that energy to take off on the next leap. This is typically accomplished by stretching stiff tendons in the leg or foot on landing, or deforming bone, which "snaps back" to act as a propulsor on the next jump. There is no obvious sign that the lagosuchids possessed such a mechanism, although it might be very difficult to determine its presence or absence from skeletal remains alone. Given recent work on the origin of powered flight, the answers to these questions may be of more than casual interest.
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- Arcucci (1997)
- Carroll (1988)
- Garner et al. (1999)
- Padian (1997).
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