About: Dicynodontoides is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 4 publications have been published within this topic receiving 149 citations. The topic is also known as: Kingoria.
TL;DR: In this paper, a comprehensive taxonomic revision of the dicynodonts of the Luangwa Basin, taking into account specimens in all major museum collections and new material collected by their team in 2009, was presented.
Abstract: Dicynodont fossils were first collected in the Luangwa Basin, Zambia, in the 1920s, but limited detailed study and taxonomic uncertainty have obscured their biostratigraphic utility and their implications for topics such as dicynodont biogeography and the effects of the end-Permian extinction. Here we present a comprehensive taxonomic revision of the dicynodonts of the Luangwa Basin, taking into account specimens in all major museum collections and new material collected by our team in 2009. We recognize 14 dicynodont species from the Upper Permian Upper Madumabisa Mudstone: Pristerodon mackayi, Endothiodon sp., Diictodon feliceps, Compsodon helmoedi, Emydops sp., Dicynodontoides cf. D. nowacki, a new tusked cistecephalid, cf. Katumbia parringtoni, Kitchinganomodon crassus, Oudenodon bainii, Odontocyclops whaitsi, Dicynodon huenei, Syops vanhoepeni, and a new lystrosaurid. Previous reports of Lystrosaurus in the basin appear to be in error. In addition, we found no significant partitioning of dicynodont taxa in the northern and southern parts of the basin, despite substantial differences in preservation, indicating the presence of a single faunal assemblage in the Upper Permian. The Madumabisa dicynodont assemblage is best correlated with the Cistecephalus Assemblage Zone of South Africa. The shared presence of Dicynodon huenei and possibly Katumbia in the Luangwa Basin and the Ruhuhu Basin of Tanzania suggests that the Tanzanian Usili Formation also can be correlated with the Cistecephalus zone. Interestingly, the Madumabisa assemblage from Zambia is more similar to the coeval assemblage from South Africa, despite its closer geographic proximity to Tanzania. The Karoo and Ruhuhu basins also include more endemic species in the Permian than the Luangwa Basin. The Middle Triassic Ntawere Formation preserves four dicynodont species (Kannemeyeria lophorhinus, “Kannemeyeria” latirostris, Zambiasaurus submersus, Sangusaurus edentatus), which occur at two stratigraphic levels. The lower Ntawere assemblage resembles that of the Omingonde Formation of Namibia in the presence of Kannemeyeria lophorhinus and potentially Dolichuranus (if “K.” latirostris represents this taxon). The upper Ntawere assemblage shares the genus Sangusaurus with that of the Manda beds of Tanzania and includes the endemic Zambiasaurus. Comparisons of these assemblages to the Omingonde and Manda suggest that both are best correlated with the Cynognathus C subzone. When combined with data on other tetrapod taxa, our revised dicynodont assemblages contribute to an emerging picture of broad faunal similarity in southern and eastern Africa during the Late Permian, and increasing differentiation between the South African and other Karoo basins following the end-Permian extinction.
TL;DR: New, nearly complete humeri of Kingoria are described from the Upper Permian Usili Formation, Ruhuhu Basin, Tanzania and are shown to be a junior synonym of Dicynodontoides Broom, 1940, and two species are recognized: D. recurvidens from South Africa and D. nowacki from Tanzania.
Abstract: The postcranial skeleton of Kingoria is well-described, and previous authors noted the taxon's divergent pectoral, pelvic, and femoral morphologies. Yet, humeral morphology of Kingoria has remained enigmatic because of poor preservation and the absence of published descriptions. Here we describe new, nearly complete humeri of Kingoria collected from the Upper Permian Usili Formation, Ruhuhu Basin, Tanzania. These specimens demonstrate that the humeral morphology of K. nowacki is much more conservative than that of its pelvis or femur. There is evidence of increased importance for long-axis rotation of the humerus in K. nowacki, and the trochlea and the capitellum are partially separated, but these morphologies are not taken to the extremes observed in cistecephalid dicynodonts. Surprisingly, the new Tanzanian humeri differ from South African specimens: the best-preserved South African specimen is more gracile, with different humeral head and deltopectoral crest morphologies. We use these differen...
TL;DR: The farm Nooitgedacht 68 in the Bethulie District of the South African Karoo Basin contains strata that record a complete Permo-Triassic boundary sequence providing important new data regarding the end-Permian extinction event in South Africa.
Abstract: The farm Nooitgedacht 68 in the Bethulie District of the South African Karoo Basin contains strata that record a complete Permo-Triassic boundary sequence providing important new data regarding the end-Permian extinction event in South Africa. Exploratory collecting has yielded at least 14 vertebrate species, making this locality the second richest Permo-Triassic boundary site in South Africa. Furthermore, fossils include 50 specimens of the otherwise rare Late Permian dicynodont Lystrosaurus maccaigi. As a result, Nooitgedacht 68 is the richest L. maccaigi site known. The excellent preservation, high concentration of L. maccaigi, presence of relatively rare dicynodonts such as Dicynodontoides recurvidens and Dinanomodon gilli, and the large size of many of these Permian individuals makes Nooitgedacht 68 a particularly interesting site for studying the dynamics of the end-Permian extinction in South Africa.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe two fragmentary mandibles that represent a new morphotype of emydopoid dicynodont therapsids and place them in the Kingoriidae subclade.
Abstract: Dicynodont therapsids were discovered in the Permian Usili Formation (Ruhuhu Basin, Tanzania) in the 1930s and in the Permian Ruhuhu Formation in the 1960s, with further collections being made in 2007, 2008, and 2012. Here we describe two fragmentary mandibles that represent a new morphotype of emydopoid dicynodont. One specimen was collected in the middle fossiliferous horizon of the Ruhuhu Formation, and the other originated in the overlying Usili Formation. Three synapomorphies support the placement of these specimens in the emydopoid subclade Kingoriidae: mandibular fenestra occluded by the dentary; curved ridge that follows the profile of the symphysis present on the edge between the anterior and lateral surfaces of the dentary; and posterior dentary sulcus absent. The specimens may represent a new dicynodont species, a previously known species for which mandibular material was unknown, or an intraspecific variant of Dicynodontoides nowacki. Regardless of which of these options is correct, th...