Moschowhaitsia

Moschowhaitsia is an extinct genus of therocephalian therapsids from the Late Permian (Guadalupian) of Russia and China. The type species, Moschowhaitsia vjuschkovi, was discovered in the Changxingian-aged Archosaurus Assemblage Zone of Russia and named in 1963 by Russian palaeontologist Leonid Petrovich Tatarinov. A second species was discovered in Jingtai County of Gansu, China in 2020 and named as M. lidaqingi in 2023 by Jun Liu and Fernando Abdala, the first whaitsiid therocephalian to be discovered in China. It was among the larger carnivores in the faunal assemblages it occurred in, with a skull-length of up to 25 centimetres (9.8 in) in M. vjuschkovi and an even larger estimated 35 centimetres (14 in) for M. lidaqingi, one of the largest therocephalian skulls reported.[1][2] The genus name Moschowhaitsia alludes to two other therocephalians, Moschorhinus and Whaitsia (a junior synonym of Theriognathus), due to the structure of its palate combining physical features of both these genera.[3]

Moschowhaitsia
Temporal range:
Life restoration of Megawhaitsia vjuschkovi
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Clade: Synapsida
Clade: Therapsida
Clade: Therocephalia
Family: Whaitsiidae
Genus: Moschowhaitsia
Tatarinov, 1963
Type species
Moschowhaitsia vjuschkovi
Tatarinov, 1963
Other species
  • M. lidaqingi Liu & Abdala, 2023

Classification and taxonomy

Moschowhaitsia is a member of the derived therocephalian clade Whaitsiidae, ranked as a family under traditional Linnaean taxonomy. Tatarinov initially assigned Moschowhaitsia to its own monotypic subfamily of whaitsiids, Moschowhaitsiinae, on the basis that it appeared to him as an intermediate form bridging the anatomy of two other subfamilies of whaitsiids, Whaitsiinae and Moschorhininae.[3] Some later researchers, including Tatarinov himself, would later elevate Moschowhaitsia to family level distinction (Moschowhaitsiidae), along with other subtaxa of whaitsiids, although nonetheless retaining the existing close taxonomic relationships under the superfamily Whaitsioidea.[4][5]

However, later research of therocephalian evolution using cladistics regardless of taxonomic ranking have found that many of the various whaitsiids/whaitsioids are in fact only distantly related to each other, with many belonging to the earlier-diverging clade Akidnognathidae instead (including members of Moschorhininae). As a clade, Whaitsiidae has been restricted to therocephalians closest to Theriognathus (the senior synonym of Whaitsia). As such, Moschowhaitsia is a member of Whaitsiidae as cladistically defined, and is one of the clade's only representatives from Laurasia.[6]

A cladogram depicting the relationships of both M. vjuschkovi and M. lidaqingi is shown below, reproduced from Liu & Abdala (2023) and simplified to show the relationships of whaitsioid therocephalians:[2]

Eutherocephalia

Scylacosuchus

Akidnognathidae

Nanictidops

Perplexisaurus

Purlovia

Caodeyao

Whaitsioidea

Ophidostoma

Hofmeyria

Mirotenthes

Ictidostoma

Whaitsiidae

Ictidochampsa

Microwhaitsia

Viatkosuchus

Theriognathus

Moschowhaitsia vjuschkovi

Moschowhaitsia lidaqingi

Ichibengops

Chthonosaurus

Baurioidea

The strict-consensus tree shown above did not recover M. vjuschkovi and M. lidaqingi as each other's sister taxa (found as such in only six of the 30 most parsimonious (i.e. shortest) trees). However, Liu and Abadala (2023) nonetheless assigned M. lidaqingi to Moschognathus as both species show more similarities to each other in morphology than either does to other whaitsiids. Such traits include the number of incisors and postcanine teeth, rugose bone on the front edge of the orbit, and a notch in the maxilla in front of the canine.[2]

See also

References

  1. Bajdek, Piotr (2015). "Microbiota and food residues including possible evidence of pre-mammalian hair in Upper Permian coprolites from Russia". Lethaia. doi:10.1111/let.12156.
  2. Liu, J.; Abdala, F. (2023). "Late Permian terrestrial faunal connections invigorated: the first whaitsioid therocephalian from China". Palaeontologia africana. 56: 16–35. hdl:10539/35706.
  3. Tatarinov, L. P. (1963). "A new Late Permian therocephalian". Paleontological Journal. 4: 76–94.
  4. Huttenlocker, A. (2009). "An investigation into the cladistic relationships and monophyly of therocephalian therapsids (Amniota: Synapsida)". Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. 157 (4): 865–891. doi:10.1111/j.1096-3642.2009.00538.x.
  5. Huttenlocker, A.K.; Abdala, F. (2015). "Revision of the first therocephalian, Theriognathus Owen (Therapsida: Whaitsiidae), and implications for cranial ontogeny and allometry in nonmammaliaform eutheriodonts". Journal of Paleontology. 89 (4): 645–664. doi:10.1017/jpa.2015.32. S2CID 87382966.
  6. Huttenlocker, A.K.; Smith, R.M.H. (2017). "New whaitsioids (Therapsida: Therocephalia) from the Teekloof Formation of South Africa and therocephalian diversity during the end-Guadalupian extinction". PeerJ. 5: e3868. doi:10.7717/peerj.3868. PMC 5632541. PMID 29018609.


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