Meiolaniidae

Meiolaniidae
Temporal range: Early Cretaceous to Holocene 48–recent Ma
Ninjemys oweni and Meiolania platyceps
Scientific classification
Kingdom:Animalia
Phylum:Chordata
Class:Reptilia
Clade:Pantestudines
Family:Meiolaniidae
Lydekker, 1887
Genera

Meiolaniidae is an extinct family of large, possibly herbivorous turtles with heavily armored heads and tails known from South America and most of Oceania. They are best known from the last surviving genus, Meiolania, which lived in the rain forests of Australia from the Miocene until the Pleistocene, and relict populations that lived on Lord Howe Island and New Caledonia until 2000 years ago. A similar form is also known from the Miocene Saint Bathans Fauna of New Zealand.[2]

The family was once thought to have originated in Australia sometime in the Miocene, when the earliest Meiolania first appeared. However, due to the discovery of South American meiolaniids, including Crossochelys and Niolamia in Eocene Argentina, it is now believed that the meiolaniids appeared sometime prior to the breakup of Gondwana during the Cretaceous. Though once believed to be cryptodires, meiolaniids are outside the Testudines crown-group, potentially indicating that their origin is even further back.[3][4][5] Several basal non-testudine turtles possibly related to meiolaniids are known in both Laurasian and Gondwanan landmasses in the Cretaceous, such as the Asian Mongolochelys.[6]

More recently, Eocene Australian species have also been uncovered.[7]

References

  1. Juliana Sterli; Marcelo S. de la Fuente; J. Marcelo Krause (2015). "A new turtle from the Palaeogene of Patagonia (Argentina) sheds new light on the diversity and evolution of the bizarre clade of horned turtles (Meiolaniidae, Testudinata)". Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 174 (3): 519–548. doi:10.1111/zoj.12252.
  2. Trevor H. Worthy, Terrestrial Turtle Fossils from New Zealand Refloat Moa's Ark, Article in Copeia 2011(1):72-76 · March 2011 Impact Factor: 1.03 · DOI: 10.2307/41261852
  3. Anquetin, J. R. M. (2012). "Reassessment of the phylogenetic interrelationships of basal turtles (Testudinata)". Journal of Systematic Palaeontology 10: 3. doi:10.1080/14772019.2011.558928.
  4. Sterli, J. (2010). "Phylogenetic relationships among extinct and extant turtles: the position of Pleurodira and the effects of the fossils on rooting crown-group turtles". Contributions to Zoology 79 (3): 93–106.
  5. New evidence from the Palaeocene of Patagonia (Argentina) on the evolution and palaeo-biogeography of Meiolaniformes (Testudinata, new taxon name), Journal of Systematic Palaeontology Volume 11, Issue 7, 2013, DOI:10.1080/14772019.2012.708674
  6. J. Sterli and M. S. de la Fuente. 2013. New evidence from the Palaeocene of Patagonia (Argentina) on the evolution and palaeo-biogeography of Meiolaniformes (Testudinata, new taxon name). Journal of Systematic Palaeontology 11(7):835-852
  7. Stephen F. Poropat; Lesley Kool; Patricia Vickers-Rich; Thomas H. Rich (2017). "Oldest meiolaniid turtle remains from Australia: evidence from the Eocene Kerosene Creek Member of the Rundle Formation, Queensland". Alcheringa: An Australasian Journal of Palaeontology. in press. doi:10.1080/03115518.2016.1224441.

See also

  • Turtles portal


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