|
Primitive
reptiles have long been recognized to have split into two major
branches, Sauropsids and Therapsids (the latter now usually called
Synapsids). The first branch, the Sauropsids or "lizard faces" (a
term coined by Thomas Henry Huxley in 1863) include the
forerunners of most reptiles, from dinosaurs to crocodiles and turtles.
Huxley distinguished them from Therapsids or "beast faces,"
including mammals and their extinct relatives.Romer
(1956) later subdivided the sauropsids into three basic groups:
Anapsids, Diapsids, and Eurapsids, recognizable by the number of
openings or fenestrae (Latin
for "windows") in the side of the skull, used for jaw muscle attachment
(see figure). This anatomical criteria for all reptiles remains in
widespread use (Benton 2005). The
Anapsids, with no fenestrae, include many basal reptiles or eureptiles,
some lizards, and perhaps also the turtles (molecular studies, however,
indicate the placement of turtles within diapsids). The Diapsids, with
two fenestrae, produced the dinosaurs, and more recently, the
birds. Huxley (1876) had correctly inferred that birds, who are
diapsids, evolved from diapsid lizards including dinosaurs. An offshoot
group of the diapsids, called the eurapsids, with two fenestrae fused
into one, produced the large marine reptiles called ichthyosaurs,
including Pleisiosaurs and Mosasaurs which were common during the
Cretaceous period. The
other major branch of early reptiles, the Synapsids, have a single
large fenestra on each side of the skull, located behind the eyes
(shown at right in figure). The synapsids developed an aorta or arch on
the left side only, and strengthened the skull by moving the quadrate
bone up and back, eliminating the otic notch. This modification of the
jaw (effectively, eliminating the location of the reptilian ear drum,
in the otic notch) proved essential in the later development of
more complex anatomy related to mammalian hearing.
Synapsid
development led to a larger brain, more developed hearing, heterodont
teeth, and homeothermy or regulated body temperature. The group
of synapsids known as Therapsids, equivalent to the term
"mammal-like reptiles," are considered to be the ancestors of mammals,
by way of the Cynodonts ("dog-teeth"), mammal-like synapsids in the
Early and Middle Triassic period.
ReferencesBenton, M. 2005, pp.104-5Huxley, T.H. 1863. The Structure and Classification of the Mammalia. Hunterian Lectures, presented in Medical Times and Gazette.
Huxley, T.H. 1876. Lectures on Evolution. New York Tribune. Extra. no 36. In Collected Essays IV:
pp 46-138
Romer, A.S. 1956, 1966. Vertebrate Paleontology. University of Chicago Press.
:
. |
|