Mesosuchia

Mesosuchia
Sebecus icaeorhinus
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Clade: Pseudosuchia
Clade: Crocodylomorpha
Clade: Mesoeucrocodylia
Informal group: Mesosuchia
Huxley, 1875[2]
Subgroups

See text.

"Mesosuchia" is an obsolete name for a group of terrestrial, semi-aquatic, or fully aquatic crocodylomorph reptiles.

Characteristics

Mesosuchians differ from modern eusuchians by a shorter secondary palate, in which the choana is not surrounded by the medial pterygoid plate, and by the amphicoelom of the vertebrae. The secondary palate is formed by the premaxillary, maxillary and palatine bones. The inner nostrils are usually located between the palatine and pterygoid bones. The jaw bones sometimes join dorsally and push the nasal bones away from the premaxillary bones. The outer nostrils usually merge. The preorbital foramen is almost always lost. The superior temporal fossa is large, and the frontal bone reaches its edge. The postorbital arch is often located directly under the skin. The pubis does not enter the acetabulum. The carapace is usually well developed[3].

History

The "Mesosuchia" were formerly placed at suborder rank as within Crocodylia. The "first" crocodiles were placed within their own suborder, Protosuchia; whilst extant species were placed within suborder Eusuchia (meaning 'true crocodiles'). Mesosuchia were the crocodylians "in between". But it is no longer regarded as genuine because it belongs to a paraphyletic group. It is replaced by its phylogenetic equivalent Mesoeucrocodylia, which contains the taxa herein, the Crocodylia, and some allied forms more recently discovered.

Classification

References

  1. ^ Viñola López, Lázaro W.; Velez-Juarbe, Jorge; Münch, Philippe; Almonte Milan, Juan N.; Antoine, Pierre-Olivier; Marivaux, Laurent; Jimenez-Vasquez, Osvaldo; Bloch, Jonathan (April 2025). "A South American sebecid from the Miocene of Hispaniola documents the presence of apex predators in early West Indies ecosystems". Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 292 (2045) 20242891. The Royal Society. doi:10.1098/rspb.2024.2891. ISSN 1471-2954. PMC 12040450. PMID 40300627.
  2. ^ "Fossilworks: Mesosuchia". Fossilworks. Archived from the original on 19 April 2023. Retrieved 15 December 2025.
  3. ^ Конжукова Е. Д. (1964). "Отряд Mesosuchia. Мезозухии". In гл. ред. Ю. А. Орлов (ed.). Основы палеонтологии Справочник для палеонтологов и геологов СССР. Vol. 12. М.: Наука. pp. 510–515/724.