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The putative lissamphibian stem-group: phylogeny and evolution of the dissorophoid temnospondyls

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 November 2018

Rainer R. Schoch*
Affiliation:
Staatliches Museum für Naturkunde, Rosenstein 1, D-70191 Stuttgart, Germany 〈rainer.schoch@smns-bw.de〉

Abstract

Dissorophoid temnospondyls are widely considered to have given rise to some or all modern amphibians (Lissamphibia), but their ingroup relationships still bear major unresolved questions. An inclusive phylogenetic analysis of dissorophoids gives new insights into the large-scale topology of relationships. Based on a TNT 1.5 analysis (33 taxa, 108 characters), the enigmatic taxon Perryella is found to nest just outside Dissorophoidea (phylogenetic defintion), but shares a range of synapomorphies with this clade. The dissorophoids proper are found to encompass a first dichotomy between the largely paedomorphic Micromelerpetidae and all other taxa (Xerodromes). Within the latter, there is a basal dichotomy between the large, heavily ossified Olsoniformes (Dissorophidae + Trematopidae) and the small salamander-like Amphibamiformes (new taxon), which include four clades: (1) Micropholidae (Tersomius, Pasawioops, Micropholis); (2) Amphibamidae sensu stricto (Doleserpeton, Amphibamus); (3) Branchiosauridae (Branchiosaurus, Apateon, Leptorophus, Schoenfelderpeton); and (4) Lissamphibia. The genera Platyrhinops and Eoscopus are here found to nest at the base of Amphibamiformes. Represented by their basal-most stem-taxa (Triadobatrachus, Karaurus, Eocaecilia), lissamphibians nest with Gerobatrachus rather than Amphibamidae, as repeatedly found by former analyses.

UUID: http://zoobank.org/dadf36db-e003-4af7-bfa7-44d79bc04450

Information

Type
Articles
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © 2018, The Paleontological Society
Figure 0

Figure 1 Phylogeny of dissorophoids as found by present analysis. Strict consensus of ten MPTs, 282 steps, CI=0.429, RI=0.711. (1) Main data set (108 characters); (2) variant analysis, giving slightly better resolved Amphibamiformes (omitting characters 17 and 30).

Figure 1

Figure 2 Phylogenetic definition of Dissorophoidea and its major constituent taxa, based on the results of the present analysis.

Figure 2

Figure 3 Morphology of basal dissorophoids (micromelerpetids) and stem taxon (Perryella). (1) Micromelerpeton credneri, skull roof (after Boy, 1995; skull length 25 mm); (2) M. credneri, palate (after Boy, 1995; skull length 22 mm); (3) Limnogyrinus elegans (personal observation; skull length 18 mm); (4) Branchierpeton amblystomum (after Werneburg, 1991; skull length 20 mm); (5) Perryella olsoni (after Ruta and Bolt, 2006; skull length 41 mm); (6) Eimerisaurus graumanni (after Boy, 1981; skull length 32 mm).

Figure 3

Figure 4 Phylogeny of basal dissorophoids (synapomorphies mapped, see Supplemental Dataset for character definitions).

Figure 4

Figure 5 Morphology of amphibamiforms. (1) Micromelerpeton credneri, skull roof (Schoch and Milner, 2014; skull length 40 mm); (2) Apateon caducus, skull roof of neotenic adult (Fröbisch and Schoch, 2009; skull length 29 mm); (3) Amphibamus grandiceps, skull roof (personal observation; skull length 18 mm); (4) Apateon gracilis, palate of metamorphosed adult (personal observation; skull length 18 mm); (5) Apateon caducus, palate of neotenic adult (after Schoch, 1992; skull length 16 mm); (6) Amphibamus grandiceps, palate (personal observation; skull length 18 mm).

Figure 5

Figure 6 Phylogeny of derived dissorophoids and origin of lissamphibians according to the monophyletic temnospondyl hypothesis (synapomorphies mapped, see Supplemental Dataset for character definitions). Two lissamphibian characters (pedicely and vertebral centrum) mapped.