Caudata Scopoli, 1777

Skutschas, Pavel P., 2016, A relict stem salamander: evidence from the Early Cretaceous of Siberia, Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 61 (1), pp. 119-123 : 119-120

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.4202/app.00124.2014

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11061226

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0774280C-FFED-FFA5-7169-82B4FB40F826

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Caudata Scopoli, 1777
status

 

Caudata Scopoli, 1777 View in CoL View at ENA (sensu Milner, 1988)

Genus et species indet.

Material.— LMCCE 1/4, fragmentary trunk vertebra ( Fig. 1 View Fig ). Shestakovo locality (Shestakovo 1 local site), bluff on right (i.e., east) side of Kiya River, 1.5 km downstream from Shestakovo village, Kemerovo Region, Western Siberia, Russia. Coarsegrained sand and sandstone of the Ilek Formation. Early Cretaceous or Aptian–Albian in age. For more details on the Shestakovo locality and its vertebrate assemblage, see Averianov et al. (2006: 361, fig. 1); Skutschas (2014: 89, fig. 1).

Description. — LMCCE 1/4 is an incomplete trunk vertebral centrum that lacks the anterodorsal portion of the anterior cotyle ( Fig. 1 View Fig ). It is large (relative to trunk vertebrae of the possible cryptobranchoid Kiyatriton leshchinskiyi from the same locality, see Skutschas 2014: fig. 4), with a ventral midline length of about 5.5 mm. LMCCE 1/4 is heavily ossified vertebra (= heavily built) that appears to have an endochondral component. The lateral and ventral surfaces of the centrum Fig. 1A–C View Fig ) are roughened and indented by scattered, small, rounded and oval pits (= pitted texture). These numerous pits are not densely situated and do not form a net-like texture. In lateral view, the centrum is relatively short anteroposteriorly and deep (ratio of ventral midline length vs. maximum height is about 1.3) and its ventral surface is broadly concave dorsally. The centrum is amphicoelous and both cotyles are deeply concave. The posterior cotyle is intact and nearly circular in posterior outline, with the ventral portion slightly narrower than the dorsal ( Fig. 1D View Fig ); the anterior cotyle is missing its dorsal portion, but it probably had a similar outline ( Fig. 1E, F View Fig ). Both cotyles retain a modest-sized notochordal pit. That pit is located slightly above the dorsoventral midpoint of posterior cotyle and it likely was in about the same location in the anterior cotyle. The inner walls of both cotyles are lined with a thin layer of calcified cartilage. The ventral surface lacks a subcentral keel. Instead, the ventral surface is moderately broad, shallowly convex from side-to-side and bracketed on either side by a shallow subcentral depression. Those depressions are perforated by small and nearly equal-sized subcentral foramina (not visible in figure); there are three foramina in the right subcentral depression and two in the left. Anteroventral to each subcentral depression, there is an anteroposteriorly elongate patch having a weakly rugose surface and bearing along its posterior portion a low, but distinct tubercle (=?anterior basapophysis). Bases of transverse processes (= rib-bearers) are present higher up and midway along the lateral sides of the centrum, but those bases are too damaged to determine whether the transverse processes were bicipital or unicipital. As best shown on the left side, the anterior and posterior bases of the transverse process are perforated by a small canal. Best preserved on the right side, the posterior alar process is an anteroposteriorly short flange that extends posteriorly from the base of the lower part of the transverse process.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Amphibia

Order

Caudata

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