Capítulo de livro

Highly Specialized Diplodocoids: The Rebbachisauridae

2022; Springer Nature; Linguagem: Inglês

10.1007/978-3-030-95959-3_5

ISSN

2197-960X

Autores

Leonardo Salgado, Pablo A. Gallina, Lucas Nicolás Lerzo, José Ignacio Canudo,

Tópico(s)

Evolution and Paleontology Studies

Resumo

With 17 species formally identified throughout the world, Rebbachisauridae is, at present, the best-represented group of South American diplodocoids, and it has a temporal record ranging from the Barremian up to the Turonian. Defined as all diplodocoids more closely related to Rebbachisaurus garasbae than to Diplodocus carnegii, these sauropods are characterized by postcranial synapomorphies (e.g., absence of the hyposphenal ridge on anterior caudal vertebrae; presence of spinodiapophyseal lamina in caudal vertebrae). Although relatively complete skulls are known in only a few genera (Limaysaurus, Lavocatisaurus, and Nigersaurus), the whole cranial evidence indicates that they were highly specialized with respect to other diplodocoids (for instance Diplodocidae). South America counts ten genera of Rebbachisauridae, most of them from the Argentine Patagonia. They embrace a rather diverse group of basally branching forms (Amazonsaurus, Zapalasaurus, Comahuesaurus, and Lavocatisaurus), derived forms (as the limaysaurines Limaysaurus and Cathartesaura and the rebbachisaurines Katepensaurus and Itapeuasaurus), together with forms of uncertain phylogenetic filiation (Rayososaurus). Rebbachisaurids were important in South America toward the end of the Early Cretaceous, integrating, at that time, the sauropod faunas together with macronarians (Titanosauriformes) and other diplodocoids (Dicraeosauridae). They persisted up to at least the Turonian, being the last diplodocoids in becoming extinct globally.

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