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Evolution in biological radiations; insights from the Triassic archosaur radiation

Adaptive radiations, or evolutionary diversifications, are the evolutionary divergence of a single lineage into many different adaptive forms. They play a critical role in the history of life as groups of organisms speciate and fill new ecological roles over geologically rapid time intervals. There is currently no agreed upon operational unit, timeframe, or amount of divergence for organisms to be considered to have undergone an adaptive radiation. Additionally, the paucity of both comparative and fossil studies has limited the utility of the adaptive radiation in framing macroevolutionary questions, such as, is ecological and morphological diversification simultaneous? An ideal fossil clade to test this question is the Archosauriformes (crocodylians, birds, and their closest relatives). Archosauriforms radiated following the end-Permian mass extinction and their lineage diversification through the Early to Late Triassic is well documented in the literature. Prior to the end-Permian mass extinction, these reptiles were both species poor and ecologically limited, but by the Late Triassic they dominated terrestrial ecosystems in both species abundance and ecological breadth. However, continued environmental instability following the end-Permian extinction has led to the hypothesis that ecological expansion of archosauriforms lagged behind the diversification of lineages.
The first chapter of my dissertation uses a Middle Triassic archosauriform tooth assemblage from Tanzania to reconstruct dietary specialization, estimated by morphological disparity of teeth. In addition to comparing tooth disparity of isolated and in situ teeth, this also provides a lens for comparing the timing of dietary specialization and species diversification. I found the archosauriforms to be faunivorous with little morphological disparity amongst the teeth. The second chapter uses an Early Triassic reptile tooth assemblage from South Africa to reconstruct the dietary specialization of archosauriforms early in their radiation to compare the amount of morphological disparity and lineage diversity. I use methods from Chapter 1 and integrate 3D morphometrics to better capture shape. I described several tooth morphotypes including six new to the locality. The morphological and dietary differences were minimal, indicating a greater species diversity than ecological diversity. The third chapter is a description of a new pseudosuchian archosaur taxon from the Middle Triassic of Tanzania. As species descriptions form the basic data unit of macroevolutionary analyses, this assists future studies of the archosauriform radiation. I recover this new taxon as the oldest known aetosaur. This species provides insights into the evolution of an armored carapace in crocodylian-line archosaurs and shows morphology related to armor evolved prior to the evolution of an herbivorous diet. / Doctor of Philosophy / There is an incredible diversity of life on Earth, but this is a small fraction of the life that once existed on our planet. The fossil record provides us a window into the past to reconstruct the history of life on our planet. Two of the patterns we see in the fossil record are rapid drops in biodiversity called mass extinctions, and rapid increases in biodiversity called biological radiations. Both of these events are often related and mass extinctions are followed by biological radiations throughout earth history. A particularly interesting case is the end-Permian mass extinction, not only because it is the largest extinction event, but also because the subsequent radiation was delayed by continuing environmental instability. An ideal group of animals to study in this time period are the archosaurs, the group of reptiles including crocodylians, birds, and their extinct relatives. Archosaur reptiles went from very few species before the extinction, to dominate ecosystems for the next 200 million years. However, we do not know if the radiation of many archosaur species occurred at the same time as they filled new roles in their communities.
The first two chapters of my dissertation focus on using fossil teeth to reconstruct the diets of archosaurs at a single location. My first chapter describes teeth from the Middle Triassic (247-237 million years ago) of Tanzania. I measured the shapes of these teeth and used that to help assign them to diets. Doing this I found there were more species than types of diets indicating the radiation of species may have occurred before specialization of life habits. In the second chapter where I describe a reptile tooth assemblage from the Early Triassic (252-247 million years ago) of South Africa. I added additional methods for measuring tooth shape, found several different types of teeth (likely different species) but mostly similar diets, indicating again a delay in life habit specialization. In my third chapter I name a new species of archosaur reptile from the Middle Triassic of Tanzania. This new species helps us to understand how heavily armored plant eaters evolved in early crocodylian relatives during the archosaur radiation.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:VTETD/oai:vtechworks.lib.vt.edu:10919/111063
Date29 June 2022
CreatorsHoffman, Devin Kane Fodor
ContributorsGeosciences, Nesbitt, Sterling James, Uyeda, Josef C., Angielczyk, Kenneth David, Stocker, Michelle
PublisherVirginia Tech
Source SetsVirginia Tech Theses and Dissertation
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeDissertation
FormatETD, application/pdf, application/pdf
RightsCreative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International, http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/

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