Oardasaurus

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Phylum:Chordata
Class:Reptilia
Order:Squamata
Family:Barbatteiidae
Oardasaurus
Temporal range: Maastrichtian, 72 Ma
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Squamata
Family: Barbatteiidae
Genus: Oardasaurus
Codrea et al., 2017
Type species
Oardasaurus glyphis
Codrea et al., 2017

Oardasaurus (meaning "Oarda de Jos lizard") is an extinct genus of lizard from the latest Cretaceous of Romania. It is a member of the Barbatteiidae, a group of lizards closely related to the Teiidae. At 20 centimetres (7.9 in) in length, it was much smaller than the only other named member of the Barbatteiidae, Barbatteius, which lived slightly later. Like Barbatteius, Oardasaurus can be identified by the presence of a crust of bone deposits, or osteoderms, on the roof of its skull; it differs from Barbatteius in the pattern of the sculpturing on this crust. Both Oardasaurus and Barbatteius lived in the isolated island ecosystem of Hațeg Island, having rapidly diversified into various generalist predators of small prey after their arrival on the island during the Early Cretaceous. They went extinct in the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event.

Oardasaurus is a small lizard, measuring roughly 20 cm (7.9 in) long.[1] It is smaller than its close relative Barbatteius, which measures up to 80 cm (31 in) long.[2] Like the teiioids Meyasaurus and Pedrerasaurus,[3] the teeth of Oardasaurus are heterodont (i.e. having several types) but are consistently bicuspid (i.e. bearing two cusps), with the rear cusp being larger. The teeth probably underwent replacement. Unlike modern Teiidae, there are no crushing teeth in the back of the jaw. Among lizards, Oardasaurus and Barbatteiusare is unique in that their temporal muscles originate from attachments on the upper portions of their parietal bones; and in that their upper temporal fenestrae are not obscured by either the postorbital bones or the postfrontal bones.[1]

A characteristic of the family Barbatteiidae, which Oardasaurus and Barbatteius belong to, is the presence of an extensive crust of osteoderms, separated by deep grooves, on the bones of the skull roof (including the parietals, postorbitals, and frontals, with the latter having a slightly different arrangement). These osteoderms preserve the imprints (collectively known as the "pileus") of the scales that laid over them. In modern Teiidae, the arrangement of the pileus (which is present directly on the skull roof due to an absent or limited osteoderm crust[4]) varies between species, while it is fairly constant in modern Lacertidae.[5] In Oardasaurus, the occipital (rear) scale of the pileus is subdivided into three smaller osteoderms in Oardasaurus, unlike Barbatteius,[2] Meyasaurus,[5] and the lacertid Plesiolacerta where there is no such division.[6] The variable division in Barbetteiidae may be transitional between teiids and lacertids.[1]

In Oardasaurus, the frontal bones are completely fused, and the suture between the frontal and parietal is straight but has a jagged margin. They are also fused in Barbatteius and adult Meyasaurus,[7] but they remain unfused in Pedrerasaurus[3] and young Meyasaurus.[7] Additionally, the margin where each frontal borders the eye socket is markedly concave in Oardasaurus. On the bottom part of the rear of each frontal, there is a small triangular depression, located just behind the crest known as crista cranii frontalis. These depressions are probably where "lappets" from the parietals inserted, much like Barabetteius and Meyasaurus.[1][2][7]

Discovery and naming

Fossil remains of Oardasaurus were found in the site of Oarda de Jos A (ODA), which is located near the village of Oarda de Jos in southern Transylvania, Romania, 3 km (1.9 mi) south of Alba Iulia on the eastern shore of the Sebeș River. The site consists of Cretaceous continental deposits, belonging to the early Maastrichtian Șard Formation, exposed as a slope 50 m (160 ft) long and 17–19 m (56–62 ft) high. Grey-black silt clays form much of the deposits. From 2008 to 2015, about 2.8 tonnes (3.1 short tons) of sediment were screen-washed at the site; the remains of Oardasaurus were among the specimens found.[1]

The type specimen of Oardasaurus, an incomplete parietal bone, is stored at the Palaeontological Laboratory of the Palaeontology-Stratigraphy Museum of Babeș-Bolyai University (PSMUBB) in Cluj-Napoca, Romania, under the specimen number PSMUBB.ODAN-A-12. Additional specimens, all stored at the PSMUBB, include PSMUBB.ODAN-A-13, a fragment from a parietal bone; PSMUBB.ODAN-A-18, a mostly complete but flattened postorbital bone; PSMUBB.ODAN-A-15 (also known as ODAN-Lizard 4), -16, -17, and -23, all fused frontal bones; PSMUBB.ODAN-A-19 (or ODAN-Amf-8), -20, and -21, all incomplete maxillae. The frontal bones belong to three different size classes, with -15 being largest, -16 and -17 being intermediate, and -23 being smallest.[1]

In 2017, Oardasaurus was named as a new genus by Vlad Codrea, Márton Venczel, and Alexandru Solomon in a research paper. They named the genus after the village of Oarda de Jos, combined with the suffix -saurus, which means "lizard". One species was assigned to this genus by Codrea and colleagues, O. glyphis. Glyphis is derived from the Greek glyphe, meaning "carving". For their research paper, Codrea and colleagues used a scanning electron microscope at the Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences in Brussels, Belgium to photograph the parietal, frontal, and maxilla.[1]

Classification

Despite the differing arrangements of their pileus impressions as well as the large gap in body size that separates them, the skull roofs of Oardasaurus and Barbatteius are still united by the presence of an osteoderm encrusting with pileus impressions, with a differentiated pattern on the frontals; the origin of the temporal muscles being located on the upper portion of the parietals (similar to other teiioids but unlike lacertoids); and the unobscured upper temporal fenestrae. Meyasaurus also shares the former two traits.[1]

Codrea and colleagues thus assigned Oardasaurus and Barbatteius to the new family Barbatteiidae. They also referred some indeterminate remains of the lower jaw - the prearticular and articular bones PSMUBB.ODAN-A-22, as well as the dentary PSMUBB.ODAN-A-24 - to this family. The family is diagnosed by the above traits as well as the presence of lappets of the parietals (shared by teiioids and lacertids), the constriction of the frontals to between the eye sockets, the widening of the squamosal bones at the rear; and the absence of a prearticular crest as well as the presence of a pterygoideus process on the prearticular bone of the lower jaw. It is unclear how closely related barbatteiids are to Meyasaurus, due to a lack of comparable bones beyond the skull.[1]

A phylogenetic analysis previously conducted by Venczel and Codrea to accompany the description of Barbatteius demonstrated that Barbatteius, and by extension other barbatteiids, are members of the Teiioidea. This inclusion is based on the fusion of the frontals as well as the inclusion of the prootic bone in the recessus scalae tympani, a structure of the inner ear. They also found that a number of characteristics were shared by Barbatteiidae and Teiidae, including the overlap of the squamosal by the postorbital; the origin of the temporal muscles on the upper portion of the parietals, which is overlapped by the contact between the parietals and the ectopterygoid bones; and the weakly-developed shelf on the inside of the tooth row.[1] The phylogenetic tree is reproduced below.[2]

Lacertoidea

Although superficially similar to barbatteiids and other teiioids, the Polyglyphanodontia (which also lived on the Transylvanian landmass) likely bore no close relation, instead representing an independent evolutionary radiation of more specialized Toxicofera close to iguanians.[1][8][9]

Paleobiology

Paleoecology

References

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