Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4747235 | Cretaceous Research | 2013 | 8 Pages |
•Gondwanasuchus scabrosus is a new Cretaceous baurusuchid crocodyliform from Brazil.•During the Late Cretaceous the Baurusuchidae were abundant and endemic to Gondwana.•Baurusuchids were terrestrial crocodyliforms that could have occupied theropod niches.•The new taxon presents highly laterally compressed teeth and well-developed binocular vision.
Baurusuchids are among the most common and diverse crocodyliform fossils from the Late Cretaceous Bauru Basin of Brazil. This inland continental basin was the habitat of a rich crocodyliform fauna containing five mesoeucrocodylian families, of which the Baurusuchidae represents highly specialized predatory crocodyliforms of terrestrial habits as indicated by their dental, cranial, and postcranial features. The large size they achieved, together with likely predatory adaptations, would suggest they competed and occupied theropod ecological niches in the Bauru Basin. Here we describe Gondwanasuchus scabrosus gen. et sp. nov., a medium-sized baurusuchid with a strongly laterally compressed skull, bearing unique dentition with deep apicobasal sulci and probably well-developed binocular vision. The cranial and dental features in Gondwanasuchus suggest that this active predator would have fed on small vertebrates and took the role of small theropods in terrestrial guild. Gondwanasuchus is the most distinctive baurusuchid known to date and enriches the knowledge on these important Gondwanan terrestrial predatory crocodyliforms.
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