Synapsid
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| Synapsids Fossil range: Late Carboniferous - Middle Cretaceous (exluding mammalia) |
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Dimetrodon grandis skeleton at the National Museum of Natural History of U.S.A.
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For complete phylogeny, see text. |
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Synapsids ('fused arch'), also known as Theropsids ('beast face'), is a class of animals that includes mammals and everything closer to mammals than to other living amniotes. The non-mammalian members were traditionally described as 'mammal-like reptiles', but are better referred to as "stem-mammals". Synapsids are one of the two major groups of amniote, the other being the sauropsids. They developed one opening in their skull (temporal fenestra) behind each eye, about 324 million years ago (mya) during the late Carboniferous Period.
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At the turn of the 20th century, synapsids were originally defined as one of the four main subclasses of reptiles, on the basis of their distinctive temporal openings. These openings in the cheek bones allowed attachment of larger jaw muscles, hence a more efficient bite. Synapsids were considered the reptilian lineage that led to mammals via gradually evolved, increasingly mammalian features, hence the term 'mammal-like reptiles'.
The traditional classification continued through to the late 1980s (see e.g. Carroll 1988). In the 1990s this approach was replaced by a cladistic one, according to which the only valid groups are those that include common ancestors and all their descendants. Because mammals are descended from (other) synapsids, mammals are included under Clade Synapsida.
Synapsids evolved a temporal fenestra behind each eye orbit on the lateral surface of the skull. It may have evolved to provide new attachment sites for jaw muscles.
Some synapsids (including mammals) also have a warm-blooded metabolism, even though early synapsids, such as pelycosaurs were most certainly cold-blooded.
Synapsids are the first tetrapods to have differentiated teeth. These include the canine, molar, and the incisors. Early synapsids had multiple jaw bones. As they evolved, these jaw bones were reduced in size and gradually moved into the ear, forming the middle ear bones.
Archaeothyris and Clepsydrops were the earliest known synapsids.[1] They belonged to a group called pelycosaurs and they lived in the Pennsylvanian epoch of the Carboniferous Period. The pelycosaurs were the first successful group of amniotes, spreading and diversifying until they became the dominant large terrestrial animals, in the latest Carboniferous and Early Permian Periods. They are currently divided into two clades, the Caseasauria and the Eupelycosauria. They were sprawling, bulky, cold-blooded and had small brains. They were the largest land animals of their time, ranging up to 3 m (10 ft) in length. Many, like Dimetrodon, had large sails that may have helped raise their body temperature. A few relict groups lasted into the later Permian.[2]
The therapsids, a more advanced group of synapsids, appeared during the first half of the Permian and went on to become the dominant large terrestrial animals during the latter half. They have dominated the world twice: once in the Permian and once in the Cenozoic, the current era. They were by far the most diverse and abundant animals of the Middle and Late Permian and included herbivores and carnivores, ranging from small animals the size of a rat (e.g: Robertia), to large bulky herbivores a tonne or more in weight (e.g: Moschops). After flourishing for many millions of years, these successful animals were all but wiped out by the Permian-Triassic mass extinction about 250 Mya, the largest extinction in Earth's history, which may have been related to the Siberian Traps volcanic event.
Only a few therapsids (but no pelycosaurs) survived the Permian extinction and went on to be successful in the new early Triassic landscape; they include Lystrosaurus and Cynognathus, the latter of which appeared later in the early Triassic. Now, however, they were accompanied by the early archosaurs (formerly known as thecodonts; this term is not used in modern classifications). Some of these, like Euparkeria, were small and lightly built, while others, like Erythrosuchus, were as big as or bigger than the largest therapsids.
Triassic therapsids included three groups. Specialised, beaked herbivores known as dicynodonts (such as Lystrosaurus and its descendants, the Kannemeyeriidae), contained some members which reached large size (up to a tonne or more). The increasingly mammal-like carnivorous, herbivorous, and insectivorous cynodonts included the eucynodonts from the Olenekian age, an early representative of which was Cynognathus. Finally, there were the therocephalians, which only lasted into the early part of the Triassic.
Unlike the dicynodonts, which remained large, the cynodonts became progressively smaller and more mammal-like as the Triassic progressed. From the most advanced and tiny cynodonts, which were only the size of a shrew, came the first mammal precursors, during the Carnian age of the Late Triassic, about 220 Mya.
During the evolutionary succession from early therapsid to cynodont to eucynodont to mammal, the main lower jaw bone, the dentary, replaced the adjacent bones. Thus, the lower jaw gradually became just one large bone, with several of the smaller jaw bones migrating into the inner ear and allowing sophisticated hearing.
Whether through climate change, vegetation change, ecological competition, or a combination of factors, most of the remaining large cynodonts (belonging to the Traversodontidae) and dicynodonts (of the family Kannemeyeriidae) had disappeared by the Norian age, even before the Triassic-Jurassic extinction event that killed off all of the large non-dinosaurian archosaurs. Their places were taken by the diapsid archosaurs known as dinosaurs, which dominated the terrestrial ecosystem for the rest of the Mesozoic Era. The remaining Mesozoic synapsids were small, ranging from the size of a shrew, to the badger-like Repenomamus.
During the Jurassic and Cretaceous, the remaining non-mammalian cynodonts were small, such as Tritylodon. No cynodont grew larger than a cat. Most Jurassic and Cretaceous cynodonts were herbivorous, and some were carnivorous. The family Trithelodontidae first appeared near the end of the Triassic. They were carnivorous and persisted well into the Middle Jurassic. The other, Tritylodontidae, first appeared at the same time as the Trithelodonts, but they were herbivorous. This group became extinct at the end of the Early Cretaceous epoch. Dicynodonts are thought to have become extinct near the end of the Triassic period, but there is evidence that this group survived. New fossil finds have been found in the Cretaceous rocks of Gondwana. This is an example of Lazarus taxon.
Today, there are 4,500 species of living synapsids, including both aquatic (whales) and flying (bats) species, and the largest animal ever known to have existed (the blue whale).[3] Humans are synapsids as well and are the current dominant species on Earth.
Synapsids evolution into mammals is believed to be triggered by moving to a nocturnal niche, one of the few niches that the increasing dinosaurs didn't dominate. Proto-mammals with higher metabolic rates were able to keep their body warm at night, and were more likely to survive. This meant consuming food (generally thought to be insects) more rapidly. To facilitate rapid digestion, proto-mammals evolved mastication (chewing) and specialized teeth that aided chewing. Limbs also evolved to move under the body instead of to the side. This allowed the proto-mammals to be able to change direction more quickly in order to catch small prey at a faster rate. Rather than out-running predators, instead proto-mammals adapted the strategy of outmaneuvering predators using this same ability, it is believed.[4]
- See also: Evolution of mammals
- Series Amniota
- CLASS SYNAPSIDA *
- Order Pelycosauria *
- Suborder Caseasauria
- Suborder Eupelycosauria *
- Family Varanopseidae
- Family Ophiacodontidae
- Family Edaphosauridae
- Family Sphenacodontidae *
- Order Therapsida *
- Suborder Biarmosuchia *
- Suborder Dinocephalia
- Suborder Anomodontia
- Suborder Gorgonopsia
- Suborder Therocephalia
- Suborder Cynodontia *
- Family Probainognathidae
- Superfamily Chiniquodontoidea *
- Order Pelycosauria *
- CLASS MAMMALIA
- CLASS SYNAPSIDA *
Synapsida |-Caseasauria `-Eupelycosauria |-Varanopseidae `-+-Ophiacodontidae `-+-Edaphosauridae `-Sphenacodontia |-Sphenacodontidae `-Therapsida |-Biarmosuchia | `-Eotitanosuchus `-Eutherapsida |-Dinocephalia `-Neotherapsida |-Anomodontia `-Theriodontia |-Gorgonopsia `-Eutheriodontia |-Therocephalia `-Cynodontia |- + -Dvinia | `--Procynosuchus `- Epicynodontia |-Thrinaxodon `-Eucynodontia |- + -Cynognathus | `- + -Tritylodontidae | `- Traversodontidae `-Probainognathia |- + - Trithelodontidae | `--Chiniquodontidae `- + - Prozostrodon `- Mammaliaformes `-Mammalia
- Benton, Michael J. (2004). Vertebrate Paleontology, 3rd ed., Oxford: Blackwell Science Ltd. ISBN 0632056371.
- Carroll, R. L. (1988). Vertebrate Paleontology and Evolution. New York: WH Freeman & Co. ISBN 0716718227.
- Colbert, E. H. (1969). Evolution of the Vertebrates, 2nd ed., New York: John Wiley & Sons Inc. ISBN 0471164666.
- Laurin, M. and Reisz, R. R., (1997), Tree of Life - Synapsida - Tree of Life Web Project
- ^ Lambert, David (2001). Dinosaur Encyclopedia, 68-69. ISBN 0-7894-7935-4.
- ^ The last of the pelycosaurs became extinct by the end of Permian
- ^ Mammals are the direct descendants of synapsids.
- ^ Synapsid Reptiles. Retrieved on 2006-12-23.
- Synapsida - Pelycosauria - at Palaeos
- Transitional Vertebrate Fossils - includes description of important transitional genera from reptile to mammal