Chunerpeton
| Chunerpeton tianyiensis Temporal range: Middle or Late Jurassic,
| |
|---|---|
| Fossil specimen of C. tianyiensis, Beijing Museum of Natural History | |
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Animalia |
| Phylum: | Chordata |
| Class: | Amphibia |
| Subclass: | Lissamphibia |
| Superorder: | Batrachia |
| Clade: | Caudata |
| Genus: | †Chunerpeton Gao & Shubin, 2003 |
| Species: | †C. tianyiensis
|
| Binomial name | |
| †Chunerpeton tianyiensis | |
Chunerpeton (meaning "early creeping animal") is an extinct genus of salamander from the Middle or Late Jurassic Daohugou Beds in Ningcheng County, Nei Mongol (Inner Mongolia), China, containing the only species Chunerpeton tianyiensis.[1] It was a small animal measuring 18 cm (7.1 in) in length,[2] and was neotenic, with the retention of external gills into adulthood.
In the original description it was placed in Cryptobranchidae, which contains modern giant salamanders.[1] A redescription published in 2020 found it to be a stem-group caudatan outside the crown group of modern salamanders.[3] A 2021 study found it to be a member of Cryptobranchoidea outside of Cryptobranchidae.[4] In 2022, a more extensive analysis, with greater character and taxon sampling, also recovered Chunerpeton as a stem-group caudatan, outside the crown group of modern salamanders, and associated with Beiyanerpeton and Qinglongtriton.[5]
Chunerpeton has been used to constrain the age of Cryptobranchoidea in over a dozen molecular divergence analyses,[5] but given the uncertain affinity of the taxon it should perhaps no longer be used in this way.[5] It lived alongside likely stem-group salamanders, such as Jeholotriton, Liaoxitriton, and Pangerpeton, all of which lived at the same age.
References
[edit]- ^ a b Ke-Qin Gao & Neil H. Shubin (27 March 2003). "Earliest known crown-group salamanders" (PDF). Nature. 422 (6930): 424–428. Bibcode:2003Natur.422..424G. doi:10.1038/nature01491. PMID 12660782. S2CID 4411650.
- ^ "Chunerpeton tianyiensis - Palaeocritti - a guide to prehistoric animals". www.palaeocritti.com. Retrieved 2022-09-09.
- ^ Rong, Yu-Fen; Vasilyan, Davit; Dong, Li-Ping; Wang, Yuan (2020-12-08). "Revision of Chunerpeton tianyiense (Lissamphibia, Caudata): Is it a cryptobranchid salamander?". Palaeoworld. 30 (4): 708–723. doi:10.1016/j.palwor.2020.12.001. ISSN 1871-174X.
- ^ Jia, Jia; Anderson, Jason S.; Gao, Ke-Qin (2021-07-23). "Middle Jurassic stem hynobiids from China shed light on the evolution of basal salamanders". iScience. 24 (7) 102744. Bibcode:2021iSci...24j2744J. doi:10.1016/j.isci.2021.102744. ISSN 2589-0042. PMC 8264161. PMID 34278256.
- ^ a b c Jones, Marc E. H.; Benson, Roger B. J.; Skutschas, Pavel; Hill, Lucy; Panciroli, Elsa; Schmitt, Armin D.; Walsh, Stig A.; Evans, Susan E. (2022-07-11). "Middle Jurassic fossils document an early stage in salamander evolution". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 119 (30) e2114100119. Bibcode:2022PNAS..11914100J. doi:10.1073/pnas.2114100119. ISSN 0027-8424. PMC 9335269. PMID 35858401.
Further reading
[edit]- Hall, Brian K. Fins into Limbs: Evolution, Development, and Transformation.
- Vitt, Laurie J.; Caldwell, Janalee P. Herpetology, Third Edition: An Introductory Biology of Amphibians and Reptiles.