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Gross morphology and microstructure of type locality ossicles of Psephophorus polygonus Meyer, 1847 (Testudines, Dermochelyidae)

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TLDR
P. polygonus was as cosmopolitan as extant Dermochelys and had a broadly similar ecology, with a possible difference concerning the dive depth, and the taxonomy of some of the Psephophorus-like species was preliminarily re-evaluate.
Abstract
Psephophorus polygonus Meyer, 1847, the first fossil leatherback turtle to be named, was described on the basis of shell ossicles from the middle Miocene (MN6–7/8?) of Slovakia. The whereabouts of this material is uncertain but a slab on display at the Naturhistorisches Museum Wien is considered the neotype. We rediscovered further type locality ossicles in four European institutions, re-evaluated their gross morphology and described for the first time their microstructure by comparing them with Dermochelys coriacea, the only living dermochelyid turtle. The gross morphology is congruent with that already described for P. polygonus, but with two significant exceptions: the ridged ossicles of P. polygonus may have a distinctly concave ventral surface as well as a tectiform shape in cross-section. They do not develop the external keel typical of many ossicles of D. coriacea. Both ridged and non-ridged ossicles of P. polygonus are characterized by compact diploe structures with an internal cortex consisting of a coarse fibrous meshwork, whereas the proportionately thinner ossicles of D. coriacea tend to lose the internal cortex, and thus their diploe, during ontogeny. The ossicles of both P. polygonus and D. coriacea differ from those of other lineages of amniotes whose carapace is composed of polygonal ossicles or platelets, in having growth centres situated at the plate centres just interior to the external bone surface and not within the cancellous core or closer to the internal compact layer. The new diagnosis of P. polygonus allows us to preliminarily re-evaluate the taxonomy of some of the Psephophorus-like species. Despite some macro- and micromorphological differences, it seems likely that Psephophorus was as cosmopolitan as extant Dermochelys and had a broadly similar ecology, with a possible difference concerning the dive depth.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The shell bone histology of fossil and extant marine turtles revisited

TL;DR: A review of previously published as well as unpublished data of shell microstructures of these groups and those of some of the earliest aquatic turtles from the Middle Jurassic show that bones are strongly influenced functionally as a result of life spent in an aquatic medium, whereas there are little to no characters of systematic value in the bones.
Journal ArticleDOI

Neck motion in turtles and its relation to the shape of the temporal skull region

TL;DR: In this paper, a geometric morphometric approach was used to compare the curve shapes of retracted necks and other neck positions with the expansion of marginal reductions in turtle skulls, and it was shown that neck retraction evolved only once within turtle evolution and that pleurodiran and cryptodiran turtle retraction are directly and independently derived from ancestral neck tucking.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bone shell microstructure of Condorchelys antiqua Sterli, 2008, a stem turtle from the Jurassic of Patagonia

TL;DR: Comparison with other stem Testudines reveals that the shell histology of C. antiqua resembles more H. romani and E. waldmani than the other stem taxa, and suggests that metaplasia plays an important role during the development of the shell in this taxon.
References
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Book

Biology of the Reptilia

Carl Gans
TL;DR: Why Study Reptilian Development?
Book

Catalogue of the Fossil Reptilia and Amphibia in the British Museum (Natural History)

TL;DR: The present work indicates an enormous amount of careful and accurate work, which, however, is of such a special kind that it cannot easily be summarized in a short review.
Journal ArticleDOI

Global phylogeography of the leatherback turtle ( Dermochelys coriacea )

TL;DR: The findings provisionally support the natal homing hypothesis for leatherback turtles, although several proximal nesting populations were indistinguishable, suggesting recent colonization or less precise natalHoming behaviour than documented for other marine turtle species.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ancient marine reptiles

TL;DR: J.M. Moody, The Paleogeography of Marine and Coastal Turtles of the North Atlantic and Trans-Saharan Regions and G.L. Bell, Jr., Phylogenetic Revision of North American and Adriatic Mosasauridea.
Journal ArticleDOI

Morphology and biology of reptiles

Angus d'A Bellairs, +1 more
- 05 May 1978 - 
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