About: Pelycosaur is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 23 publications have been published within this topic receiving 415 citations. The topic is also known as: Pelycosauria.
TL;DR: Aerosaurus wellesi n. sp. is based upon two nearly complete articulated skeletons from the Lower Permian deposits near Arroyo del Agua, New Mexico as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: Aerosaurus wellesi n. sp. is based upon two nearly complete articulated skeletons from the Lower Permian deposits near Arroyo del Agua, New Mexico. Study of these superbly preserved specimens indicates that the genus Aerosaurus is distinguishable from most other pelycosaurs, including Varanops and Varanodon, in having fewer maxillary and dentary teeth, all of which are more laterally compressed and more strongly recurved. The parasphenoid is uniquely expanded laterally and posteriorly, and bears rows of teeth on ridges. Aerosaurus also differs from all other pelycosaurs in which the braincase is adequately known in the formation of the dorsum sellae mainly from the basisphenoid. Aerosaurus was probably an aggressive predator of lizard-like habitus, with an unusually long tail for a pelycosaur. Aerosaurus, Varanops, and Varanodon are the only pelycosaurs that can be included in the family Varanopseidae with certainty; however, Basicranodon may also be a varanopseid. The possibility that the allege...
TL;DR: The Late Middle Permian age of the varanopid family predates the previously known oldest fossil evidence of parental care in terrestrial vertebrates by 140 Myr.
Abstract: Living species of mammals, crocodiles and most species of birds exhibit parental care, but evidence of this behaviour is extremely rare in the fossil record. Here, we present a new specimen of varanopid ‘pelycosaur’ from the Middle Permian of South Africa. The specimen is an aggregation, consisting of five articulated individuals preserved in undisturbed, close, lifelike, dorsal-up, subparallel positions, indicating burial in ‘life position’. Two size classes are represented. One is 50% larger than the others, is well ossified, has fused neurocentral sutures and is distinguished by a coat of dermal ossifications that covers the neck and shoulder regions. We regard this individual to be an adult. The remaining four skeletons are considered to be juveniles as they are approximately the same size, are poorly ossified, have open neurocentral sutures and lack dermal ossifications. Aggregates of juvenile amniotes are usually siblings. Extant analogues of adult and juvenile groupings suggest that the adult is one of the parents, leading us to regard the aggregation as a family group. The Late Middle Permian age of the varanopid family predates the previously known oldest fossil evidence of parental care in terrestrial vertebrates by 140 Myr.
TL;DR: In this paper, the varanopseid Elliotsmithia longiceps is the sole basal synapsid known from Gondwana, based on a single specimen from the Upper Permian of South Africa.
Abstract: Late Permian terrestrial faunas of South Africa and Russia are dominated taxonomically and ecologically by therapsid synapsids. On the basis of a single specimen from the Upper Permian of South Africa, the varanopseid Elliotsmithia longiceps is the sole basal synapsid (‘pelycosaur’) known from Gondwana. Recent fieldwork in the Upper Permian of South Africa has produced a second varanopseid specimen that is referrable to Elliotsmithia. Data from both this specimen and the holotype suggest that Elliotsmithia forms a clade with Mycterosaurus from the Lower Permian of North America and Mesenosaurus from the Upper Permian of Eastern Europe. That postulate is supported by the three most parsimonious trees discovered in a new analysis of varanopseid phylogeny. However, the available data cannot resolve the interrelationships of these three genera. The new phylogenetic results contrast with earlier work identifying Elliotsmithia as the basal member of a clade that includes the North American taxa Aerosaurus, Varanops, and Varanodon. The new trees reduce the stratigraphic debt required by the latter scenario, and the one with the least stratigraphic debt identifies Elliotsmithia and Mesenosaurus as sister taxa. Two new taxa are erected, Mycterosaurinae and Varanodontinae, for the two varanopseid subclades.
TL;DR: This paper used character and skeletal completeness metrics to assess the completeness of known specimens, while a recently published supertree of basal synapsids is tested for congruence between the stratigraphic and phylogenetic hypotheses.
TL;DR: A partial varanopid skull and mandible from the Pristerognathus Assemblage Zone of the Beaufort Group, in the South African Karoo Basin, which is probably latest Middle Permian (Capitanian) in age is reported.
Abstract: We report on a partial varanopid skull and mandible from the Pristerognathus Assemblage Zone of the Beaufort Group, in the South African Karoo Basin, which is probably latest Middle Permian (Capitanian) in age. This mycterosaurine is not only the youngest known varanopid from the Southern Hemisphere, but it is also the youngest known “pelycosaur” (i.e., non-therapsid synapsid). Like all other members of this clade of hypercarnivores, the teeth are strongly flattened, recurved, and have finely serrated cutting edges. The anterior dentary teeth form a caniniform region, and the splenial features a foramen intermandibularis oralis, the first ever to be described in a “pelycosaur.” The last varanopids were the smallest carnivores of latest Middle Permian continental faunas. Occupation of the small carnivore guild appears to have allowed varanopids to achieve a nearly cosmopolitan distribution throughout the Middle Permian, between the great Early Permian radiation of basal synapsids and the spectacular diversification of therapsid synapsids in the Late Permian and Early Triassic.