Caiman brevirostris

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Phylum:Chordata
Class:Reptilia
Caiman brevirostris
Temporal range: Late Miocene, 11.6–5.3 Ma[1]
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Clade: Archosauria
Order: Crocodilia
Family: Alligatoridae
Subfamily: Caimaninae
Clade: Jacarea
Genus: Caiman
Species:
C. brevirostris
Binomial name
Caiman brevirostris
Souza Filho, 1987

Caiman brevirostris is an extinct species of caiman that lived during the Late Miocene, around 11.6 million years ago, to the end of the Miocene 5.3 million years ago in Acre and Amazonas, Brazil as well as Urumaco, Venezuela. Several specimens have been referred to the species, but only 3 of them are confidently placed in the species. C. brevirostris was originally named in 1987 on the basis of a single, incomplete rostrum with an associated mandibular ramus that had been found in Acre, Brazil. C. brevirostris is very distinct among Caiman species and caimaninae overall in that it preserves a characteristically short and robust skull that bears blunt posterior teeth that were built to break down harder foods. This was an adaption for durophagy (the diet of hard-shelled organisms), likely to crush shells of mollusks and clams which were common in the wetlands that C. brevirostris resided in.

Caiman brevirostris was described in 1987 by Brazilian paleontologist J. D. Souzha Filho on the basis of an incomplete rostrum and associated right mandibular ramus that were collected from the Miocene age strata of the Solimões Formation in the municipality of Sena Madureira in Acre, Brazil.[2] The species name "brevirostris" comes from the Greek words brevis- meaning "short" and -rostrum meaning "snout", after the species' distinct short and robust snout.[2] In the 2000s and 2010s, multiple specimens from the Urumaco Formation of Venezuela were incorrectly referred to C. brevirostris, instead actually belonging to other caimanines.[3][4][5][6] In 2003 during a joint expedition between the Universidade Federal do Acre and the Universidade Federal de Rondônia, a skeleton including a complete skull and associated postcranial material of C. brevirostris was collected from the Talismã locality in Manuel Urban municipality in Amazonas, Brazil.[6] The specimen was deposited in the collections of the Universidade Federal do Acre and described in 2014 in a study that found only the Talismã specimen and the holotype could be referred to the species.[6] However, another specimen, an articulated skull and mandible from the Urumaco Formation, was also referred to C. brevirostris in 2016.[7]

Classification

Caiman brevirostris has been included in several phylogenetic analyses, but it most frequently comes up in polytomy with other fossil Caiman species.[6][8] Below is the phylogenetic analysis conducted by Salas-Gismondi et al., 2015:[8]

Globidonta

Description and paleobiology

Paleoenvironment

References

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