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Anatomy and phylogeny of the gavialoid crocodylian Eosuchus lericheifrom the Paleocene of Europe
Delfino, M.; Piras, P.; Smith, T. (2005). Anatomy and phylogeny of the gavialoid crocodylian Eosuchus lericheifrom the Paleocene of Europe. Acta Palaeontol. Pol. 50(3): 565-580
In: Acta Palaeontologica Polonica. Polska Akademia Nauk. Instytut Paleobiologii: Warszawa. ISSN 0567-7920; e-ISSN 1732-2421, more
Peer reviewed article  

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Keywords
    Geological time > Phanerozoic > Geological time > Cenozoic > Paleogene > Paleocene
    Crocodylia [WoRMS]; Crocodylomorpha; Eosuchus; Gavialidae
    Marine/Coastal
Author keywords
    crocodylia; Gavialidae; Eosuchus; transoceanic dispersal;osmoregulation; Paleocene; Jeumont; Erquelinnes

Authors  Top 
  • Delfino, M.
  • Piras, P.
  • Smith, T., more

Abstract
    Originally designated by Dollo in 1907, the holotype of Eosuchus lerichei has never been carefully described but simply cited and compared in a number of papers. This work is an attempt to fill this gap and to place this taxon in a cladistic phylogenetic context. E. lerichei can be considered a valid basal gavialoid from late Paleocene of North Western Europe, sharing the presence of extremely enlarged foramina aerea on quadrates with the coeval Eosuchus minor from eastern North America (formerly described as Gavialis minor). These two species can be considered sister taxa and, for priority reason, they should be both ascribed to genus Eosuchus. The results of the cladistic analysis show that the European species possess characters that can be considered as slightly derived if compared to those of its American relative, suggesting an eastward dispersion from North America before the Paleocene-Eocene boundary and before the full opening of the Atlantic Ocean or local evolution from a basal gavialoid stock similar to E. minor. Both species of Eosuchus come from marine outcrops and represent a further evidence for the salt-water tolerance of the earliest stages of Gavialoidea evolutionary history. Despite the present endemicity of the only living gharial, Gavialis gangeticus, the historical biogeography of gavialoids shows a lost global distribution and reveals several transoceanic dispersals.

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