Chamaeleontiformes

Clade of lizards From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Chamaeleontiformes is a hypothesized clade (evolutionary grouping) of iguanian lizards defined as all taxa sharing a more recent common ancestor with Chamaeleo chamaeleon (the common chamaeleon) than with Hoplocercus spinosus (the Brazilian spiny-tailed lizard), Polychrus marmoratus (bush lizard), or Iguana iguana (green iguana). It was named by paleontologist Jack Conrad in 2008 to describe a clade recovered in his phylogenetic analysis that included the extinct genus Isodontosaurus, the extinct family Priscagamidae, and the living clade Acrodonta, which includes agamids and chameleons.[1] It is a stem-based taxon and one of two major clades within Iguania, the other being Pleurodonta. Below is a cladogram from Daza et al. (2012) showing this phylogeny:[2]

Iguanomorpha
Phylum:Chordata
Class:Reptilia
Order:Squamata
Suborder:Iguania
Quick facts Scientific classification, Subgroups ...
Chamaeleontiformes
Temporal range: Early Jurassic- present, 190–0 Ma
Common chameleon, Chamaeleo chamaeleon
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Squamata
Suborder: Iguania
(unranked): Chamaeleontiformes
Conrad, 2008
Subgroups

Isodontosaurus?
Priscagamidae
Acrodonta

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Other analyses place Priscagamidae outside Iguania altogether, resulting in a Chamaeleontiformes that only includes Isodontosaurus and Acrodonta. Below is a cladogram from Conrad (2015) with this phylogeny:[3]

References

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