Volume 56: 2023
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Festschrift in Honour of Professor Bruce S Rubidge
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Browsing Volume 56: 2023 by Author "Liu, Jun"
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Item Late Permian terrestrial faunal connections invigorated: the first whaitsioid therocephalian from China(2023-07) Liu, Jun; Abdala, FernandoThe record of therocephalian therapsids from the late Permian of China has recently been greatly expanded by the discovery of several new taxa of Akidnognathidae, a group previously known principally from South Africa and Russia. Continuing this string of discoveries, we present here the first Chinese record of a whaitsiid therocephalian. This is also the first record published of a tetrapod from Jingtai, Gansu, a late Permian locality that also yields remains of other groups such as dicynodonts, captorhinids, and chroniosuchians. This is the third taxon of whaitsiid therocephalian recognized in North Pangea. The new therocephalian is similar to the Russian Moschowhaitsia vjuschkovi in overall appearance, and although they are only recovered as sister-taxa in 6 out of 30 most parsimonious trees in our phylogenetic analysis, it is tentatively referred to Moschowhaitsia as a new species,M. lidaqingi. The phylogeny obtained is largely similar to previous hypotheses, recovering three main lineages of Eutherocephalia: Akidnognathidae, Whaitsioidea and Baurioidea. However, it differs from previous analyses in finding Chthonosauridae (comprising the Russian Chthonosaurus and Zambian Ichibengops) to be deeply nested within Whaitsioidea. Therocephalians were among the largest carnivores in the late Permian of North China, and may have represented the top predators in some faunas.Item The pre-eminence of the Karoo Basin in the knowledge of the Permo-Jurassic cynodonts: a historical synthesis and taxonomical quantification(Evolutionary Studies Institute, 2023) Abdala, Fernando; Hendrickx, Christophe; Jasinoski, Sandra C; Gaetano, Leandro C; Liu, JunThe search for the ancestors of mammals is historically connected with the extensive Karoo Basin of South Africa. This is because the Karoo features some of the largest exposures of Permo-Jurassic terrestrial deposits in the world and fossil discoveries were made here early in the history of palaeontology. Among the mammal-like lineages that are well-represented in Karoo fossil assemblages are the cynodonts. Originally conceived as a group exclusively containing fossil taxa, Cynodontia was subsequently redefined to include living mammals, and its Permian and early Mesozoic members are now referred to as non-mammaliaform cynodonts. Here we present a historical account of the research programme on non-mammaliaform cynodonts in the Karoo Basin, which represent the most important record of this group in the world. It covers a time spanning from the first named species in 1859 until the present day, which we arbitrarily divided into three periods: the Early Period extending from 1859 until 1932, the Second Period from 1933 to 1982, and the Current Period from 1983 until now. In the context of the global record of named species, we present quantitative analyses documenting the total number of nominal non-mammaliaform cynodont species from the Karoo (including junior synonyms and homonyms) as well as numerical comparison with taxa currently considered valid. Lastly, we compare the record of non-mammaliaform cynodont species from South Africa with other places in the world, such as Argentina and Brazil, which also have a diverse record of this group.