An artistic interpretation
of what the newly identified cynodont Bonacynodon schultzi looked like
during its lifetime about 235 million years ago during the Triassic. Credit:
Jorge Blanco
|
Two weird, mammal-like
reptiles that sort of looked like scaly rats, each smaller than a loaf of
bread, roamed ancient Brazil about 235 million years ago, likely dining on
insects the predators snagged with their pointy teeth, a new study finds.
The analysis of two
newfound species of cynodont, a group that gave rise to all living mammals,
sheds light on how mammals developed from these late Triassic creatures, the
researchers said.
"These new fossils
help [us] understand in more detail the evolution of pre-mammalian forms that
gave rise to the group of mammals, in which we humans (Homo sapiens) are
included," the study's lead author, Agustín Martinelli, a paleontologist
at the Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul in Brazil, told Live Science in
an email. [In Photos: Mammals
Through Time]
Cynodonts predate
dinosaurs, first appearing in the fossil record about 260 million years ago,
during the Permian period. Their descendants include marsupial and placental
mammals (the furry creatures usually thought of as mammals), as well as
monotremes — mammals that lay eggs instead of giving birth to live young, such
as the platypus and echidna, the researchers said.
However, the early
cynodonts that lived during the late Permian and the early Triassic periods
weren't mammals, but rather reptiles with mammal-like skulls and jaws, the
researchers said.
The specimen of one of the newfound cynodont species has been resting in the collection department at the Museum of Earth
Sciences in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil since 1946. That's when L.I. Price, a
Brazilian paleontologist, found the two skulls and two jaws in rock dating to
between 237 million and 235 million years ago in the Santa Cruz do Sul
municipality of Brazil's southern state of Rio Grande do Sul.
Those specimens belong to a
small animal of about 12 inches (30 centimeters) in length, with unusually
large, protruding upper-canine teeth suggesting it ate insects. The creature's anatomy indicates that it is part of an extinct family
of carnivorous cynodonts called Probainognathidae.
In fact, the newfound species
is likely related to Probainognathus jenseni, a species discovered in
Triassic-age rocks of the La Rioja province in western Argentina. But the
researchers said the newly discovered creature is different enough to justify
having its own genus and species: Bonacynodon schultzi. The name honors
two eminent paleontologists, José Bonaparte from Argentina and Cesar Schultz
from Brazil, both of whom spent their lives studying the Triassic fossils of
South America.
The other newfound cynodont
species, also discovered in the state of Rio Grande do Sul, was identified from
fewer remains — just a jaw with teeth, the researchers said. The scientists dubbed it Santacruzgnathus
abdalai, in honor of Fernando Abdala, an Argentinian paleontologist who
studies South American and African cynodonts, the researchers said.
S. abdalai was about half the size of B. schultzi, measuring only 6 inches
(15 cm) in length. The shape and dentition of S. abdalai's teeth are
"reminiscent of those present in early mammals," Martinelli said.
However, both cynodonts
lived millions of years before the appearance of the first known mammal: a shrew-like creature that lived about 160 million years ago in what is now China, experts
told Live Science in 2011.
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