Figures
Abstract
Background
The earliest dinosaurs are from the early Late Triassic (Carnian) of South America. By the Carnian the main clades Saurischia and Ornithischia were already established, and the presence of the most primitive known sauropodomorph Saturnalia suggests also that Saurischia had already diverged into Theropoda and Sauropodomorpha. Knowledge of Carnian sauropodomorphs has been restricted to this single species.
Methodology/Principal Findings
We describe a new small sauropodomorph dinosaur from the Ischigualsto Formation (Carnian) in northwest Argentina, Panphagia protos gen. et sp. nov., on the basis of a partial skeleton. The genus and species are characterized by an anteroposteriorly elongated fossa on the base of the anteroventral process of the nasal; wide lateral flange on the quadrate with a large foramen; deep groove on the lateral surface of the lower jaw surrounded by prominent dorsal and ventral ridges; bifurcated posteroventral process of the dentary; long retroarticular process transversally wider than the articular area for the quadrate; oval scars on the lateral surface of the posterior border of the centra of cervical vertebrae; distinct prominences on the neural arc of the anterior cervical vertebra; distal end of the scapular blade nearly three times wider than the neck; scapular blade with an expanded posterodistal corner; and medial lamina of brevis fossa twice as wide as the iliac spine.
Conclusions/Significance
We regard Panphagia as the most basal sauropodomorph, which shares the following apomorphies with Saturnalia and more derived sauropodomorphs: basally constricted crowns; lanceolate crowns; teeth of the anterior quarter of the dentary higher than the others; and short posterolateral flange of distal tibia. The presence of Panphagia at the base of the early Carnian Ischigualasto Formation suggests an earlier origin of Sauropodomorpha during the Middle Triassic.
Citation: Martinez RN, Alcober OA (2009) A Basal Sauropodomorph (Dinosauria: Saurischia) from the Ischigualasto Formation (Triassic, Carnian) and the Early Evolution of Sauropodomorpha. PLoS ONE 4(2): e4397. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0004397
Editor: Paul Sereno, University of Chicago, United States of America
Received: November 20, 2008; Accepted: December 30, 2008; Published: February 16, 2009
Copyright: © 2009 Martinez et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Funding: Instituto y Museo de Ciencias Naturales of the Universidad Nacional de San Juan, research funders. TV Tokio, Fieldwork funders. The funders didn't have any role in the study or in the decision to publish or preperation of the manuscript.
Competing interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
Introduction
Basal Dinosauria
The early evolution of the Dinosauria, including the split between its two main clades Saurischia and Ornithischia, remains poorly understood because of the scarcity of fossiliferous terrestrial beds covering the late Middle Triassic (Ladinian) and early Late Triassic (Carnian). The best preserved record of Ladinian continental tetrapod assemblages comes from the Chañares Formation in Northwestern Argentina. The representative fauna includes the best known sister taxa of Dinosauria, the dinosauriforms Marasuchus lilloensis [1], [2] and Pseudolagosuchus talampayensis [3], [4]. The recently described non-dinosaurian dinosauromorphs Dromomeron romeri [5] and Silesaurus opolensis [6], found in rocks of younger (Norian) age, demonstrate that basal dinosauromorphs survived into the Late Triassic. Judging from the record of the Carnian Ischigualasto Formation assemblage (ca. 228 Ma [7]), in which the two main clades of Dinosauria has been established [8], [9], the radiation of Dinosauria, and the split of Saurischia into its two main branches, Theropoda and Sauropodomorpha, occurred in a few million years, between the sedimentation of the Ladinian Chañares and the Carnian Ischigualasto Formations.
Carnian basal saurischians dinosaurs
Carnian basal saurischian dinosaurs are scarce and frequently fragmentary. Most are from South America, except the fragmentary Alwalkeria maleriensis [10] from India. The most complete and better known skeletons were found in the Carnian Ischigualasto Formation in Northwestern Argentina. This record includes Herrerasaurus ischigualastensis ( = Frenguellisaurus ischigualastensis and Ischisaurus cattoi), Eoraptor lunensis [8], [11]–[13], and three new undescribed taxa [14]–[16]. To the Carnian Upper Santa María Formation in Brazil belong the fragmentary herrerasaurid Staurikosaurus pricei [17] and the basal sauropodomorph Saturnalia tupiniquim [18]. Although Saturnalia presents apomorphies that confirm that it is a sauropodomorph (relatively short head, long and narrow ventral ramus of the squamosal, high tooth crowns on the anterior quarter of the tooth-bearing areas and broad distal humerus) [19], it retains morphological characters that indicate a basal position within Sauropodomorpha. Those characters are the straight dentary, fine and straight tooth serrations, tibia longer than the femur, presence of trochanteric shelf, and fourth trochanter placed proximally on the shaft of the femur, among others. Knowledge of pre-Norian sauropodomorph evolution has been restricted to this single species.
We report here a new primitive sauropodomorph dinosaur from the lower levels of the Ischigualasto Formation (Carnian) in San Juan Province, Argentina. The remains consist of one incomplete, partially disarticulated skeleton unearthed during the 2006 field season of the Museo de Ciencias Naturales of San Juan in Ischigualasto Provincial Park.
Methods
Preparation
The holotype was prepared using pneumatic air scribe, pin vice and water immersion. The red-brown-colored bones were embedded in a grey-green fine-grained sandstone matrix with calcareous cement. Several pieces were encased in light-grey calcareous concretions.
Terminology
We employ traditional, or “Romerian,” anatomical and directional terms over veterinarian alternatives [20]. “Anterior” and “posterior,” for example, are used as directional terms rather than the veterinarian alternatives “rostral” or “cranial” and “caudal”. We also follow recent recommendations regarding the identification of vertebral laminae [21].
We used the phylogenetic definitions for basal taxa within Dinosauria proposed by Sereno [22]. Sauropodomorpha, for example, has a stem-based definition in opposition to Theropoda and does not require the monophyly of Saurischia or Prosauropoda (as defined, for example, by Galton and Upchurch [23]). In this way, Sauropodomorpha is defined as “The most inclusive clade containing Saltasaurus loricatus but not Passer domesticus, nor Triceratops horridus.”
Results
Systematic Paleontology
Systematic hierarchy.
Dinosauria Owen, 1842
Saurischia Seeley, 1887
Sauropodomorpha Huene, 1932
Panphagia gen. nov.
Panphagia protos sp. nov
Etymology.
protos, first (Greek). In reference to the basal position of the new taxon within Sauropodomorpha.
Holotype.
PVSJ 874; partial skull including the right nasal and prefrontal, left frontal, both parietals, both quadrates, right prootic, supraoccipital, anterior half of the left lower jaw, and right lower jaw lacking the anterior tip of the dentary; axial remains includes one anterior and two posterior cervical vertebrae, four posterior dorsal neural arches, one dorsal centrum, first primordial sacral vertebra, two proximal, one proximo-medial, and 15 distal caudal vertebrae; appendicular elements include the left scapula, left ilium, left pubic apron, left ischium, right tibia and astragalus, right metatarsal 3, proximal half of probable left metatarsal 4, and four pedal phalanges of uncertain position, one of which is an ungual. The bones were found disarticulated but in close association over an area of 1 m2. The specimen is an immature individual that has open neurocranial, neurocentral and scapulocoracoid sutures and an estimated body length of approximately 1.30 m.
Type Locality.
Valle Pintado, Hollada de Ischigualasto, Ischigualasto Provincial Park, San Juan Province, Argentina (Figure 1).
The red arrow points to the holotypic site of Panphagia protos, which is located near the base of the Carnian Ischigualasto Formation.
Horizon and Age.
40 m above the base of the Ischigualasto Formation, Carnian (ca. 228.3 Mya) [7], Ischigualasto–Villa Unión Basin. The holotypic layer is approximately at the same level of the dated ash, which implies a Lower Carnian age for the specimen.
Diagnosis.
Dinosaur characterized by an anteroposteriorly elongated fossa on the base of the anteroventral process of the nasal; wide lateral flange on the quadrate with a large foramen located far from the shaft; deep groove on the lateral surface of the lower jaw surrounded by prominent dorsal and ventral ridges, extending from the position of ninth tooth to the surangular foramen; posteroventral process of the dentary bifurcated in two slender rami that overlap the lateral surface of the angular; long retroarticular process of the articular transversally wider than the articular area for the quadrate; oval scars on the lateral surface of the posterior border of the centra of cervical vertebrae; distinct prominences located posterodorsally to the diapophyses on the neural arc of the anterior cervical vertebra; distal end of the scapula blade nearly three times wider than the neck; scapula blade with an expanded posterodistal corner limited by a wedged posterior border; and medial lamina of brevis fossa twice wider than the iliac spine.
These features distinguish Panphagia protos from known basal sauropodomorphs such as Saturnalia tupiniquim and other basal saurischians as Eoraptor lunensis.
Description
Although the specimen was found in disarticulation with the exception of the 15 distal caudal vertebrae, the proximity of all pieces, the agreement in size between the different bones, and the absence of any duplicate elements all suggest these bones pertain to a single individual (Figure 2). All the limb bones and vertebrae have hollow shafts as in Eoraptor, Herrerasaurus, the basal sauropodomorph BRMSG Ca7456 [24], and neotheropods. The skeletal size and general proportions resemble those of Eoraptor. Nevertheless, Panphagia is slightly larger, axially more elongated, and has relatively shorter hindlimb bones than Eoraptor (Tables 1, 2).
Reconstruction shows preserved bones (white) and missing bones (light grey for left side; dark grey for right side). Body length is approximately 1.30 m.
Cranium.
The nasal is proportionally short, measuring less than half the length of the cranium as in Eoraptor and basal sauropodomorphs [23] but shorter than that in Herrerasaurus [12] and the neotheropods “Syntarsus” [25] and Coelophysis [26]. The lateral border of the nasal is slightly concave (Figure 3B) and differs from the convex border of Eoraptor. The internarial process arches above the margin of the skull in lateral view (Figure 3A) as in Eoraptor and some basal sauropodomorphs such as Plateosaurus [27] and Lufengosaurus [28]. An anteroposteriorly elongated fossa is located on the base of the subtriangular anteroventral process (Figure 3A), which is not present in Eoraptor or Herrerasaurus. There is a well developed posterolateral process of the nasal (Figure 3B) as in Eoraptor, basal theropods and sauropodomorphs [19].
Right nasal in lateral (A) and dorsal (B) views. (C)-Right prefrontal in lateral view. (D)-Left frontal in dorsal view. (E)-Left parietal in dorsal view. (F)-Left quadrate in posterior view. (G)-Supraoccipital in posterior view. (H)-Right prootic in lateral view. Abbreviations: avp, anteroventral process of nasal; en, external nares; fmb, dorsal border of foramen magnum; ip, internarial process; lf, lateral flange; me, median eminence; nf, lateral fossa on nasal; o, orbit; PFs, prefrontal suture; plp, posterolateral process of nasal; POs, postorbital suture; pptm, M. protractor pterygoideus attachment; PTf, pterygoid flange; Qc, quadrate condyle; Qf, quadrate foramen; stf: supratemporal fossa; stfb, medial border of supratemporal fossa; V, trigeminal notch; vcdf, vena capitis dorsalis fossa. Scale bar equals 1 cm.
The prefrontal (Figure 3C) is L-shaped, with a concave orbital surface and slightly convex dorsal surface as in Eoraptor. The posterior process fits on a deep groove on the anterolateral surface of the frontal (Figure 3D).
The frontal is narrow between the orbits as in Eoraptor (Figure 3D), unlike the wide frontal of Herrerasaurus. The posterior part of the dorsal surface forms the anterior wall of the supratemporal fossa as in other dinosaurs [4]. The sutural surface for the anterodorsal process of the postorbital is a deep and narrow groove as in Eoraptor but differing from the wide sutural area of Herrerasaurus.
The parietal presents a slender posterolateral wing and a well marked dorsal ridge that medially delimits the supratemporal fossa (Figure 3E). The dorsal ridges of both parietals converge posteriorly but do not contact each other, unlike the condition in Herrerasaurus.
The shaft of the quadrate is dorsoventrally bowed as in Eoraptor and unlike the straight quadrate of Herrerasaurus. The lateral flange is transversally wider than in Eoraptor and Herrerasaurus. The quadrate foramen is large and fully enclosed in a deep fossa located on the lateral flange, above the neck, at the same level of the ventral border of the pterygoid wing (Figure 3F). This foramen is located laterally on the wing and well separated from the shaft, which is different than its position proximal on the shaft found in Herrerasaurus, Eoraptor, basal sauropodomorphs and basal neotheropods. The pterygoid flange forms more than 70% of the quadrate height as in most basal saurischians [29]. The quadrate condyle presents a well-developed sulcus of anteromedial direction, as in Herrerasaurus (PVSJ 53, holotype of Frenguellisaurus) and Plateosaurus [30].
The supraoccipital is much wider than it is high (Figure 3G), as in Herrerasaurus and basal sauropodomorphs such as Pantydraco [29] and Efraasia [31]. As in Eoraptor, it presents a prominent nuchal crest on the posterior surface, above the dorsal border of the foramen magnum. The foramina for the vena capitis dorsalis form deep notches on the posterior surface near the laterodorsal border (Figure 3F), similar to the non-dinosaurian dinosauriform Silesaurus [6].
The prootic bears a wide trigeminal notch anteromedially located and presents a well defined anteroventral surface for the protractor pterygoideus muscle (Figure 3H). Medially it preserves parts of the internal ear.
Lower jaw.
The lower jaw is proportionally more slender than in Eoraptor. The articulation of the lower jaw is located ventral to the tooth row, as in many sauropodomorphs and Eoraptor (Figure 4A, B). The length of the retroarticular process is greater than the depth of the mandible below the glenoid. The external mandibular fenestra is dorsoventrally pinched in its anterior portion as in Eoraptor and represents 16% of the mandibular length (Figure 4A). The reduction of the fenestra is also present in basal sauropodomorphs.
Right lower jaw in lateral (A) and medial (B) views. (C)-Fragmentary left lower jaw in lateral view. (D)-Posterior end of right lower jaw in dorsal view. Abbreviations: A, angular; AR, articular, aSAf, surangular foramen; C, coronoid; D, dentary; emf, external mandibular fenestra; emg, external mandibular groove; g, groove; IC, intercoronoid; imf, internal mandibular fenestra; PA, prearticular; pvp, posteroventral process of dentary; rap, retroarticular process; SA, surangular; SP, splenial. Scale bar equals 1 cm.
The dentary comprises more than 55% of the length of the lower jaw, as in Eoraptor, Herrerasaurus and many other basal saurischians. The posterior half of the ventral border of the dentary is slightly concave in lateral view, similar to that of basal sauropodomorphs such as Pantydraco, Plateosaurus and Massospondylus and different from the straight ventral border of Eoraptor and the slightly convex border of Herrerasaurus. The anterior part of the dentary, from the anterior tip to the level of the fourth tooth, expands dorsoventrally as in the basal neotheropods Coelophysis and Syntarsus [32] and to a lesser degree in Herrerasaurus and Eoraptor. Several large and deep neurovascular foramina open on the lateral surface of the dentary. They are located along a line parallel to the dorsal border, along the complete tooth series, but at the level of the tenth dentary tooth, they are located inside of a deep grove that posteriorly reaches the anterior surangular foramen (Figure 4A,C). Two pronounced ridges border this groove dorsally and ventrally, being the latter the most prominent. A similar groove, but limited to the dentary and without the ridges is present in Coelophysis rodhesiensis [26]. The ventral ridge differs from that of other sauropodomorphs as Thecodontosaurus neotype [24], Plateosaurus [30], and Coloradisaurus [19], in being wider at mid-length of the tooth bearing area than at the posterior end of the dentary. The posteroventral process of the dentary is bifurcated into two slender branches that overlap the lateral surface of the angular; the dorsal one reaches the ventral border of the external mandibular fenestra, and the other reaches the ventral border of the lower jaw (Figure 4A).
The splenial covers the medial aspect of the dentary and the ventral part of the intercoronoid. The mylohyoid foramen is fully enclosed by the splenial and located anteroventrally. The posterior ramus medially overlaps the ventral border of the prearticular and the anterior process of the angular. The suture between the splenial, dentary and prearticular does not show evidence of the intramandibular joint.
The surangular forms most of the lateral surface of the posterior part of the lower jaw, and the dorsal and posterior borders of the external mandibular fenestra. A small foramen opens just anterior to the posterior surangular foramen, below the surangular ridge. As in other saurischians, a large anterior surangular foramen opens anteriorly on the dorsal border of the surangular, enclosed in an anteroposteriorly oriented groove. The anterodorsal process of the surangular extends well anterior to the external mandibular fenestra, as in Eoraptor and unlike the short process of Herrerasaurus and most basal sauropodomorphs such as Plateosaurus [30] and Massospondylus [33].
The articular forms the posterodorsal border of the lower jaw. Unlike any other saurischian, the long retroarticular process is transversally wider than the articular fossa for the quadrate condyles (Figure 4D). The articular fossa is oriented along an anteromedial-posterolateral axis.
The angular extends anteriorly to its contact with the dentary and splenial at the level of the anterior border of the external mandibular fenestra. Posteriorly its distal tip is broken. Judging from the articular facet on the lateroventral border of the surangular, the slender posterior tip would have extended to the level of the retroarticular process. This long and slender posterior process of the angular is similar to that of Eoraptor and different from the short process of Herrerasaurus.
Dentition.
Only the dentary teeth are preserved. There are at least 23 alveoli on the left dentary (Figure 4C) and apparently 22 on the right (Figure 4A). The teeth of Panphagia are slightly constricted at the base (Figure 4C, 5A) as in basal sauropodomorphs and some of the teeth of Eoraptor. Another feature of the teeth is the presence of labial and lingual eminences that extend along the crown (Figure 5A, B). A similar eminence is present on the labial surface of the crowns of Thecodontosaurus neotype, and Eoraptor, although in the latter the lingual surfaces are unexposed. As in other basal sauropodomorphs, the teeth of Panphagia have coarse oblique serrations on the anterior and posterior margins (Figure 5C) that differ from the fine, perpendicular serrations present in Saturnalia [19] and basal saurischians. The morphology and arrangement pattern are different between the anterior quarter and the rest of the tooth series, with a fairly abrupt transition occurring after the fourth or fifth tooth (Figure 4C). This is best observed in the left rather than the right jaw, as the latter has crowns that are dislodged from their alveoli. The anterior teeth are longer than the posterior, as in Saturnalia [34] and most basal sauropodomorphs. They are also less basally constricted, and more posteriorly recurved. The posterior teeth are smaller, more leaf-shaped, and present more marked serrations. Although the size of each tooth is similar, the height of the crown gradually decreases backwards. They are also closely apressed in a subimbricated pattern, whereas the anterior ones are more spaced. Again, this can be best seen in the left jaw, where the teeth are in their original position.
Anterior dentary tooth in labial (A) and lingual (B) views. Abbreviations: lae, labial eminence; lie, lingual eminence. Scale bar equals 1 mm.
Axial skeleton.
Three disarticulated cervical vertebrae are preserved that likely represent C4, C7 and C8. The cervical vertebrae of Panphagia are slightly more elongate than those of Eoraptor, the neural arches being proportionately lower. The centra are parallelogram-shaped in lateral view. Their ventral and lateral sides are concave and a keel is present ventrally as in Eoraptor. Panphagia has two accessory lateroventral ridges on the anterior part of the centrum that converge posteriorly (Figure 6A). The parapophyses are located on the anterior border of the centrum. All preserved cervical vertebrae bear oval scars on the lateral surface at the posterior border of the centra (Figure 6B), a unique character for this taxon. Pleurocoels are absent as in Eoraptor. The neural arches are characterized by low neural spines with a convex dorsal border and a prominent, acute anterior corner. The prezygapophyses extend anteriorly farther than in Eoraptor. As in sauropodomorphs, the epipophyses do not extend beyond the posterior end of the postzygapophyses, unlike Eoraptor, Herrerasaurus, and neotheropods such as Syntarsus. The presumptive C4 has a distinct prominence located on the neural arch posterodorsal to the diapophysis (Figure 6B), which is not present in Eoraptor or any other basal dinosaur. The left prezygapophysis of the presumptive C7 has an abnormal bone growth that has doubled its width compared to its opposite (Figure 6C).
(A)-Posterior cervical vertebra (presumptive C8) in ventral view. (B)-Anterior cervical vertebra in lateral view. (C)-Posterior cervical vertebra (presumptive C7) with abnormal outgrowth in dorsal view. Dorsal neural arch in lateral (D) and posterior (E) views. First primordial sacral (S1) in lateral (F) and dorsal (G) views. (H)-Posterior caudal vertebrae in lateral view (reversed). Abbreviations: ao, abnormal outgrowth in prezygapophysis; d, diapophysis; e: eminence; ha, haemal arch; hs, hyposphene; lk, lateral ventral keels; lr, lateral ridge; ns, neural spine; os, oval scars; p, parapophysis; prz, prezygapophysis; poz, postzygapophysis; sr, sacral rib; tp, transverse process; vk, median ventral keel. Scale bar equals 1 cm.
The cervical ribs are gracile with a long rod-shaped shafts directed posteriorly and a delicate anterior process that greatly exceeds the anterior border of the centrum as in Eoraptor and most saurischians. The medial surface of the cervical ribs has a deep concavity posterior to the capitulum. The tuberculum is subcylindrical and posterodorsomedially oriented. The broad capitulum is located on the medial surface of the rib and projects medially toward the parapophysis.
One centrum and four neural arches are preserved from the dorsal column of Panphagia. The centrum belongs to a posterior dorsal vertebra and is similar to that of Eoraptor, although slightly less excavated laterally. The neural arches are have well-developed laminae (prezygodiapophyseal, postzygodiapophyseal, anterior centroparapophyseal, paradiapophyseal and posterior centrodiapophyseal) that delimit deep infradiapophyseal fossae (Figure 6D). The hyposphene is dorsoventrally short, and the hypantrum is poorly developed (Figure 6E). This is similar to PVSJ 745, and Guaibasaurus [35] but unlike the well developed hypantrum of Herrerasaurus [36], Dilophosaurus [37] and Massospondylus [38], among others.
The preserved anterior (or mid) dorsal rib has a long, robust capitulum and a short, more gracile tuberculum. The capitular articular surface is larger than the tubercular surface. A small lamina spans the distance between both articular facets. The rib curves slightly distal to the union of the capitulum and tuberculum and is straight in anterior view. The posteriorly-bowed shaft has a longitudinal sulcus on its posterodorsal side that vanishes distally.
The only one sacral vertebra preserved, the first primordial sacral. The anteriorly offset, distally expanding rib is C-shaped in lateral view (Figure 6F). The posterior part of the transverse process does not reach the iliac blade (Figure 6G), as in Eoraptor, Saturnalia, Efraasia [39], [40], the basal sauropodomorph YPM 56733 [41], and Plateosaurus [42] but unlike Herrerasaurus and neotheropods [42].
As in the cervical series, the caudal vertebrae of Panphagia are proportionally longer and lower than in Eoraptor. The anterior transverse processes are distally expanded as in Eoraptor, but are posterolaterally oriented, instead of laterally as in Eoraptor. The prezygapophyses of the distal caudals are short (Figure 6H), unlike the condition in Herrerasaurus and neotheropods [36]. The hemal arches of the anterior vertebrae are long as in Eoraptor. The lateral surface of the posterior vertebrae presents a longitudinal ridge extending along the centrum just below the neurocentral suture.
Appendicular Skeleton.
The scapula of Panphagia is broad and robust (Figure 7). As in Eoraptor [13] and Saturnalia [43], the proximal one-half expands gradually from the neck to the oblique dorsal borders of the acromion and glenoid. This is less derived than the abrupt right angle between the acromion and scapular blade in Herrerasaurus. The scapular blade is strongly expanded distally, the distal end nearly three times broader anteroposteriorly than the neck. This marked distal expansion is greater than that among other basal dinosaurs, which exhibit dital ratios of approximately two (Saturnalia, Eoraptor, Guaibasaurus [44]) or less than two (Asylosaurus [41], Efraasia [45]). The distal border of the blade is canted anteroventrally as in Saturnalia, Guaibasaurus, Syntarsus [25]. In Eoraptor, Asylosaurus, and Herrerasaurus [46], in contrast, the distal end is perpendicular to the long axis of the blade. The posterodorsal corner of the blade has a subtriangular extension (Figure 7A).
Left scapula in lateral (A), anterior (B), and medial (C) views. Abbreviations: ac, acromion; g, glenoid surface; pdp, posterodistal process. Scale bar equals 2 cm.
The ilium is long and low with a well developed brevis fossa and supraacetabular crest, as in the basal saurischians Eoraptor, Guaibasaurus, and Saturnalia (Figure 8A). The end of postacetabular process is asymmetrical with a medial blade twice as wide as the iliac spine (Figure 8B). This condition resembles that the basal ornithischians Scelidosaurus and Lesothosaurus [19] and differs from that of Eoraptor, in which the brevis fossa in distal view is symmetrical. The laterodorsal surface of the postacetabular process bears a shallow depression ventral to the dorsal border; similar scars are present in some basal sauropodomorphs, such as the Mogna specimen (PVSJ 569 [47]). Although located in the same position, this scar differs from the prominent rugosity of Saturnalia [42] and PVSJ 845 [16]. The acetabulum is partially closed as in the basal saurischians Guaibasaurus and Saturnalia. The dorsal border of the pubic peduncle is rounded and has a semicircular cross-section (Figure 8C), differing from the triangular cross-section in Eoraptor with its sharper dorsal margin. The ventral border of the proximal one-half of the postacetabular process is strongly convex in lateral view, differing from the straight border in Saturnalia. The posterior border of the postacetabular process is slightly convex in dorsal view, similar to that in Guaibasaurus and differing from the concave margin that characterizes Eoraptor and Saturnalia.
Left ilium in lateral (A), posterior (B), and anterior (C) views. Left pubis in anterodorsal (D) and lateral (E) views. Left ischium in lateral (F) and distal (G) views. Abbreviations: de, distal expansion; ib, iliac blade; is, iliac spine; ml: medial lamina of brevis fossa; mvl, medioventral lamina; pap, postacetabular process; pf, pubic facet; pp, pubic process; sac, supraacetabular crest. Scale bar equals 2 cm.
Although the proximal and distal ends are lacking, the pubis seems to be elongated as in most dinosaurs, differing from the short pubis of the basal dinosauromorphs Lagerpeton and Marasuchus [48], 2 (Figure 8D–F). The pubic apron is blade-shaped with subparallel lateral and medial margins as in Eoraptor and most sauropodomorphs (Figure 8D). The pubic apron of Panphagia is anteroposteriorly straight as in Saturnalia, and differing from the slightly curved pubis of Eoraptor (Figure 8E).
The ischium is long and gracile with a medial lamina restricted to its proximal one-third as in Eoraptor (Figure 8F). Nevertheless, Panphagia has a semicircular section at mid-shaft, unlike the triangular midshaft section of Saturnalia and Eoraptor. The distal end is dorsally expanded as in Saturnalia [42], differing from the slightly expanded distal end of Eoraptor and Herrerasaurus. In distal view the distal end presents a semicircular outline, similar to that of neotheropods [19], but different from the triangular shape present in Herrerasaurus, Saturnalia and more derived sauropodomorphs (Figure 8G).
The tibia is similar to that of other basal saurischians such as Eoraptor, Herrerasaurus, and Saturnalia. The proximal end is subtriangular, the cnemial crest projects slightly anteriorly, and the distal end has a short posterolateral process (Figure 9A). The lateral condyle is located close to the posterior border in lateral view, similar to that in Eoraptor but differing from the more centered condyle of Saturnalia, PVSJ 845 [16], and more advanced sauropodomorphs. The descriptive terms used to differentiate these shapes in lateral view, however, are poorly differentiated. The distal end is subrectangular with the transverse width slightly greater than its anteroposterior length (Figure 9B). This condition is more strongly expressed in more advanced sauropodomorphs, such as Massospondylus [38], Plateosaurus [49], Riojasaurus [50] and others. As in Saturnalia, the anteroposterior length of the distal end of the tibia is greater medially than laterally, and the posterior border is slightly concave in distal view. This latter condition is similar to that in Plateosaurus but different from the straight or slightly convex border in Eoraptor and Herrerasaurus. The medial tip of the posterolateral process is distally short (Figure 9C), as in Eoraptor, and unlike the distally projected process of Saturnalia, Herrerasaurus, basal sauropodomorphs and basal neotheropods as Syntarsus [32].
Right tibia in lateral (A), distal (B), and posterior (C) views.(D)-Right astragalus in proximal view. Right metatarsal 3 in anterior (E) and proximal (F) views. Abbreviations: cc, cnemial crest; db, dorsal border; ep, extensor pit; ff, fibular facet; lc, lateral condyle of proximal tibia; plf, posterolateral fossa on proximal surface; pmc, posteromedial corner; pvp, posteroventral process. Scale bar equals 2 cm.
The astragalus is subrectangular in proximal view, although the anteromedial corner is particularly prominent (Figure 9D). This condition resembles that in Saturnalia but differs from the more rounded anteromedial corner in Eoraptor. Although the ascending process is broken, the base is subrectangular and broader laterally than medially with the long axis anteroposteriorly oriented as in Eoraptor and Saturnalia. The fibular facet is transversally narrow as in Eoraptor, Saturnalia, and other sauropodomorphs. The elliptical fossa located behind the ascending process is well delimited by a ridge as in Eoraptor, Saturnalia and other basal sauropodomorphs.
Metatarsal 3 is 50% of the length of the tibia, similar to that in Eoraptor and Herrerasaurus [36]. The proximal end has a parallelogram shape in proximal view with a uniform transverse width (Figure 9F). This shape is similar to that in Herrerasaurus and Eoraptor but differs from the subtriangular shape of Saturnalia and other basal sauropodomorphs. The shaft is gently bowed medially (Figure 9E). The distal condyles are asymmetrical, the lateral condyle protruding laterally with a deeper extensor pit and collateral ligament fossa.
The three non-ungual pedal phalanges of uncertain position are preserved. These may well be penultimate, or at least distal, because of the presence of well developed posterodorsal processes. All have deep extensor and collateral pits, and asymmetrical condyles, resembling those of Eoraptor. The preserved pedal ungual phalanx is gently curved, and presumably belong to digit III, judging for its size and the symmetrical lateral grooves.
Discussion
Comparative Considerations
Panphagia protos exhibits features that place it among dinosaurs, such as a wide temporal fossa on the frontal, reduction of the external mandibular fenestra; epipophyses on postaxial cervical vertebrae, first sacral rib anteriorly expanded, and well developed brevis fossa on the ilium. It exhibits notable saurischian characters as well, such as the long mid-cervical ribs that are subparallel to the neck, a hyposphene-hypantrum articulation in the dorsal vertebrae, enlarged sacral transverse processes, a broad supraacetabular crest, and a medial lamina of the ischium restricted to the proximal one-third of the bone. In addition Panphagia presents a distally expanded ischium, a eusaurischian character.
Although Panphagia is structurally close to the common ancestor of Theropoda and Sauropodomorpha, several unequivocal synapomorphies indicate that Panphagia is a basal sauropodomorph. These include an enlarged external naris, concave ventral border of the dentary (lateral view), tooth size differentiation along the tooth row, sublanceolate crowns that have a slight basal constriction and oblique, coarse serrations, imbricate arrangement of posterior dentary teeth, separation between the iliac blade and the posterior part of the transverse process of the first sacral vertebra, and a fibular facet on the astragalus that is transversally narrow in dorsal view. In addition, Panphagia presents some other ambiguous features that strengthen a sauropodomorph affinity.
These include reduction of the external mandibular fenestra, rudimentary lateral ridge below the tooth row on the lateral surface of the dentary, lengthening of cervical vertebrae, pubic apron blade-shaped with subparallel lateral and medial margins, and distal end of the tibia subrectangular with a transverse width slightly greater than the anteroposterior length. Furthermore, the tibia of Panphagia is of similar length to that of Eoraptor, although all other bones are longer. Considering that the femoral length is correlated with the body mass [51], we can infer that the femur of Panphagia is relatively longer than in Eoraptor and that the femur/tibia ratio of Panphagia would have been greater than in Eoraptor. This also suggests a closer affinity affinity with Sauropodomorpha than with other basal dinosaur clades. Nevertheless it is possible than the entire hindlimb of Panphagia was relatively short compared with Eoraptor.
The new specimen shares some features with Saturnalia, such as the anteroventral inclination of the distal border of the scapular blade, dorsally expanded distal end of the ischium, lateral border of the astragalus anteroposteriorly wider than the medial border, acute posteromedial angle of the astragalus in proximal view, and ascending process of the astragalus subrectangular with long axis anteroposterior and broader laterally than medially. However, the lack of knowledge of cranial and axial elements of Saturnalia precludes further comparisons.
The relatively long skull of Panphagia represents the primitive condition when compared with the reduced skull length in other sauropodomorphs. Although the femur is unknown, we infer a skull/femur length ratio of approximately 0.7 based on Eoraptor. This ratio is greater than that inferred for Saturnalia [19], although the incompleteness of the skull and dentary of the latter casts doubt on this value.
Several features are shared between Panphagia and Eoraptor, such as the extremely hollow bones, similar structure and proportions, internarial process arched above the margin of the skull in lateral view, sublanceolate teeth with lateral prominences on the crowns, dorsoventral compression of the anterior part of the external mandibular fenestra; transverse process of the first primordial sacral vertebra not reaching the ilium, pubic apron blade-shaped with a subparallel lateral and medial margins; distal end of the tibia subrectangular with transverse width slightly greater than the anteroposterior length, medial tip of the posterolateral process of the tibia not distally projected, fibular facet of the astragalus transversally narrow; and ascending process of the astragalus subrectangular with the longer axis anteroposteriorly oriented and laterally wider than medially, among others.
The shared landmarks with Saturnalia are not surprising, because Saturnalia is currently recognized as a sauropodomorph, but the resemblance with Eoraptor is noticeable, especially if it is considered as a theropod [13]. Although the problem of the phylogenetic position of Eoraptor exceeds the purpose of this study, as was noted before, Eoraptor exhibit some features that resemble sauropodomorphs. Those characters are: lanceolate teeth; enlarged external nares; and mandibular joint well below the tooth row [19]. In addition several other characters can be cited: ventral ramus of the squamosal more than five times longer than anteroposteriorly wide; transverse process of the first primordial sacral vertebra not reaching the ilium; reduced olecranon on the ulna; short and pointed preacetabular process; fibular facet of the astragalus transversally narrow; ascending process of the astragalus anteroposteriorly wide; and anteroposterior length of the medial border of the astragalus in proximal view notably wider than that of the lateral border. Moreover, some of the “theropod” characters of Eoraptor, such as the extremely hollow limb bones are also present in basal sauropodomorphs (e.g., Mogna specimen PVSJ 610; BRMSG Ca7456 [24]), suggesting this is a plesiomorphic condition for Saurischia.
Phylogenetic Position
In order to determine the phylogenetic position of Panphagia protos within basal Dinosauria, we decided to add Panphagia to the data matrix published by Langer and Benton [19], because it is a recent study that includes both Saturnalia and Eoraptor. To that analysis we added a line of character states for Panphagia (Table 3). We maintained the original character states for all the taxa except Eoraptor, for which we corrected several character state scores (Table 3).
We swapped “Other Ornithischia” and “Other Sauropodomorpha” for of “Ornithischians” and “Sauropodomorpha,” respectively, following the phylogenetic definitions for these taxa proposed by Sereno (2005). The new analysis resulted in three most-parsimonious trees of 187 steps (consistency index 0.561, retention index 0.568)(Figure 10). An implicit enumeration search [52] and jackknifing (probability of character removal 0.36, 1000 resampled matrices) were performed.
Consensus of three most-parsimonious trees resulting from the present parsimony analysis (tree length 187 steps; consistency index 0.561, retention index 0.568). The jackknife frequency (p = 0.36′ 1000 replications) and Bremer support values for each node are depicted above and below the internal branch leading to that node, respectively.
All of the most-parsimonius trees nested Panphagia within Sauropodomorpha as the most basal sauropodomorph and sister group to Saturnalia and other sauropodomorphs. These trees differ from those of Langer and Benton [19] in the unresolved position of Silesaurus and Guaibasaurus (Figure 10).
Four synapomorphies unite Panphagia with Saturnalia and other sauropodomorphs: dentary tooth crowns constricted at the base (character 24); lanceolate crowns in most dentary teeth (char. 26); tooth crowns of the anterior quarter of the dentary series higher than the others (character 28); and short posterolateral flange of distal tibia (character 90). The characters that place Panphagia as less derived than Saturnalia are: posteriorly curved crowns (character 25); roughly semicircular distal outline of ischium (character 81); and lateral condyle of tibia posteriorly located (character 85). The aforementioned discussion suggests that Panphagia represents a new distinctive sauropodomorph, representing the most primitive known taxon of Sauropodomorpha.
Early Origin of Sauropodomorpha
The early evolution of saurischians dinosaurs from a small cursorial ancestor [13], [19] seems to be confirmed by the recent discoveries of new basal dinosaurs. With the exception of the Herrerasauridae, all of these basal forms are small-bodied species less than 3 m in length, such as Eoraptor, Saturnalia and Guaibasaurus. Panphagia and two new but unpublished basal saurischians from the Carnian Ischigualasto Formation [15], [16] are also small-bodied species. The general similarity among all of these basal dinosaurs suggest that few structural changes stand between Eoraptor, Panphagia and the new basal theropod PVSJ 560 [15]. Size increase does not appear to have been a major factor during Carnian times in this region of Pangaea.
The basal sauropodomorph Saturnalia was discovered in the rhynchosaur biozone of the Carnian Santa María Formation in Brazil, strata widely regarded as contemporary to the Ischigualasto Formation in Argentina based on faunal similarities [53], [54]. The absolute age of 228 My (earliest Carnian) for a level 20 meters above the base of the Ischigualasto Formation [7] suggests that deposition of the formation may have begun during the Ladinian. The presence of Panphagia near the base of the Ischigualasto Formation suggests that the origin of Sauropodomorpha occurred during the Ladinian or earlier during the Middle Triassic. Panphagia lived with at least other five different basal dinosaurs (Eoraptor, Herrerasaurus, PVSJ 605 [14], PVSJ 560 [15], and PVSJ 845 [16]) in the lower section of the Ischigualasto Formation, suggesting that saurischian dinosaurs were already well diversified at the dawn of the Carnian.
Acknowledgments
We thank Paul Sereno and Augusto Haro for the earlier discussion on the specimen and Paul Sereno and Jeffrey Wilson for their suggestions on the manuscript. We are indebted to the field crew of 2006. We also thank Diego Abelin for skillfull preparation of the fossil material and Leandro Martínez for photography.
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