Extinct genus of therapsids that lived in the Guadalupian epoch
Moschognathus is an extinctgenus of dinocephaliantherapsid in the familyTapinocephalidae. The genus includes only the type speciesM. whaitsi, named by palaeontologistRobert Broom in 1914. It was a short-snouted tapinocephalid, closely related to and resembling the well-known genus Moschops, but its skull is less thickened overall has a relatively longer and shallower snout by comparison. Indeed, Moschognathus has typically been regarded as a junior synonym of Moschops (e.g. by King, 1988 and Atayman et al., 2009)[2][3] since 1969 after Lieuwe Dirk Boonstra sunk Moschognathus into Moschops, albeit retained as its own doubtfully valid species.[4] However, researchers in the 21st century have expressed doubt over this synonymy and suggested that Moschognathus is a distinct taxon after all, including first by Christian Kammerer in a 2009 Ph.D. thesis and formally in 2015 by Alessandra D. S. Boos and colleagues (including Kammerer) in 2015.[1]Moschognathus has since began to re-enter scientific literature of dinocephalians as a valid name and treated distinct from Moschops.[5]
The holotype specimen, AMNH FARB 5602, is a partial skeleton including the upper jaw tips, mandibles, vertebrae (including a complete cervical series from the neck), ribs, and the right pelvis and femur.[1] In addition to the holotype specimen, a complete skull and mandibles have tentatively been assigned to Moschognathus. This specimen, AM 4950, was initially identified as a juvenile Anteosaurus prior to preparation,[6] but was subsequently identified as a subadult Moschops by Julien Benoit and colleagues in 2016 and again in 2017.[7][8] This skull was argued to belong instead to Moschognathus in a Ph.D. thesis by Saniye Neumann, and this proposal was formally adopted in subsequent literature.[5][9]
References
^ a b cBoos, A.D.S.; Kammerer, C.F.; Schultz, C.L.; Paes Neto, V.D. (2015). "A tapinocephalid dinocephalian (Synapsida, Therapsida) from the Rio do Rasto Formation (Paraná Basin, Brazil): Taxonomic, ontogenetic and biostratigraphic considerations". Journal of South American Earth Sciences. 63: 375–384. Bibcode:2015JSAES..63..375B. doi:10.1016/j.jsames.2015.09.003.
^King, G. M. (1988). Anomodontia. Encyclopedia of paleoherpetology, part 17C. Gustav Fischer. pp. 1–174. ISBN 0895742500.
^Atayman, S.; Rubidge, B.S.; Abdala, F. (2009). "Taxonomic re-evaluation of tapinocephalid dinocephalians" (PDF). Palaeontologia africana. 44: 88–90. hdl:10539/17294.
^Boonstra, L.D. (1969). "The fauna of the Tapinocephalus zone (Beaufort Beds of the Karoo)". Annals of the South African Museum. 56 (1).
^ a bBenoit, J.; Kruger, A.; Jirah, S.; Fernandez, V.; Rubidge, B. S. (2021). "Palaeoneurology and palaeobiology of the dinocephalian therapsid Anteosaurus magnificus" (PDF). Acta Palaeontologica Polonica. 66. doi:10.4202/app.00800.2020.
^Modesto, S.P.; Rubidge, B.S.; de Klerk, W.J.; Welman, J. (2001). "A dinocephalian therapsid fauna on the Ecca-Beaufort contact in Eastern Cape Province, South Africa". South African Journal of Science. 97: 161–163.
^Benoit, J.; Norton, L. A.; Jirah, S. (2023). "The maxillary canal of the titanosuchid Jonkeria (Synapsida, Dinocephalia)". The Science of Nature. 110 (4). 27. doi:10.1007/s00114-023-01853-w. PMC 10241669. PMID 37272962.