Hyaenasuchus

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Phylum:Chordata
Clade:Synapsida
Clade:Therocephalia
Hyaenasuchus
Temporal range: Middle Permian, Capitanian
Interpretive illustration of the skull of Hyaenasuchus, SAM-PK-1079, drawn after Broom (1932)
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Clade: Synapsida
Clade: Therapsida
Clade: Therocephalia
Family: Lycosuchidae
Genus: Hyaenasuchus
Broom, 1908 Nomen dubium
Species:
H. whaitsi
Binomial name
Hyaenasuchus whaitsi
Broom, 1908 Nomen dubium
(=Lycosuchidae incertae sedis)

Hyaenasuchus is a dubious genus of therocephalian therapsids from the middle Permian (Capitanian) of South Africa. It includes the type and only species, H. whaitsi, named by Scottish-born South African palaeontologist Robert Broom in 1908 from a single weathered but largely complete skull and lower jaws of an indeterminate lycosuchid therocephalian from the Karoo Basin.[1] The skull is very similar to that of Lycosuchus, and Broom distinguished them only on the basis of different tooth counts. Hyaenasuchus was informally synonymised with Lycosuchus in 1987, and this proposal was upheld in subsequent literature up until 2014 following the re-identification of Simorhinella as another lycosuchid.[2] The holotype of Hyaenasuchus cannot be reliably distinguished from either Lycosuchus or Simorhinella and so cannot be confidently synonymised with either one. As such the sole specimen is now identified as Lycosuchidae incertae sedis, and the name Hyaenasuchus is regarded as a nomen dubium.[3]

The holotype specimen, SAM-PK-1079, was collected by the Reverend J. H. Whaits on the farm Rietfontein 56 in Prince Albert, South Africa, from deposits belonging to the middle-Permian (Capitanian) aged Tapinocephalus Assemblage Zone in exposures the Abrahamskraal Formation. Although largely complete, the specimen is badly weathered, with portions of the top of the front and snout missing, and is encased in a very hard rock matrix that makes further preparation difficult.[1][2][3]

Broom diagnosed Hyaenasuchus as a new species for having six upper incisors in each premaxilla, two pairs of functional upper canines (so called "double canines"),[a] and four postcanines in each maxilla. This was in contrast to Lycosuchus, with five upper incisors and only one or two postcanines.[1] Notably, this was the first time Broom identified the two pairs of canines as being simultaneously functional in a lycosuchid, after initially believing one set to be a replacement pair in Lycosuchus.[4]

In 1987, palaeontologist Juri van den Heever re-interpreted the dentition of Hyaenasuchus (and so their diagnostic validity) in his unpublished PhD thesis on early therocephalian systematics. He noted there is an inconsistent number of incisors in each premaxilla, with only five in the better preserved right premaxilla that occupy the entire toothrow, while six as described by Broom are only suggested in the more damaged left premaxilla. Further, although Broom believed Hyaenasuchus to have two pairs of simultaneously functional upper canines, only one on each side is definitively fully erupted, with the first canine on the right being broken at the root while the second canine on the left side is not fully grown. Van den Heever interpreted this pattern instead as recording the alternating position of the functional canine and its replacement (as seen in other lycosuchids), with the rear canine having functionally replaced the first on the right side and the left rear canine growing in ready to replace the older first canine. Finally, he also identified up to three postcanines in the holotype of Lycosuchus, but also dismissed postcanine count as a useful diagnostic tool due to their potential variability relating to body size and growth of the canines.[2]

Description

Broom's original interpretation of the skull of Hyaenasuchus (SAM-PK-1079) drawn in 1908.

Apart from the teeth, the skull of Hyaenasuchus as preserved is otherwise identical to Lycosuchus in general structure. Among the features that identify it as a lycosuchid are a deep suborbital bar (the bridge of bone beneath the eye sockets) and palatal teeth on the transverse processes of the pterygoid bones. A notable feature shared with Lycosuchus is a thin flange of bone projecting from the bottom of the maxilla that houses the postcanines with a prominent horizontal ridge of bone above it (although the ridge is not as strongly developed as it is in the holotype of Lycosuchus).[2] SAM-PK-1079 is a reasonably large lycosuchid, with a skull measuring 296 millimetres (11.7 in) long, of which 130 millimetres (5.1 in) is the snout.[3]

In his initial 1908 reconstruction, Broom illustrated Hyaenasuchus with a low intertemporal bar without a raised sagittal crest sloping down from behind the eyes to the occiput.[1] He revised his reconstruction in 1932 when redescribing Hyaenasuchus (and other lycosuchids) in his book The Mammal-like Reptiles of South Africa and the origin of mammals, reconstructing the skull with a more elevated sagittal crest as in other lycosuchids.[7]

Taxonomy

Notes

References

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