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Redescription of Chaohuperleidus Primus (Actinopterygii, Perleidiformes) from Lower Triassic of Anhui Province, South China
DAI Yanlin, SUN Zuoyu, LU Hao, JIANG Dayong, ZHOU Min
Acta Scientiarum Naturalium Universitatis Pekinensis    2021, 57 (5): 852-864.   DOI: 10.13209/j.0479-8023.2021.064
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Chaohuperleidus primus has yet to be completely described due to the limit of the original material which were collected from Upper Member of the Nanlinghu Formation (Spathian, Olenekian, Early Triassic) at Majiashan quarry, Chaohu City, Anhui Province. The taxon was redescribed in detail by adding three complete specimens from the type horizons. The generic diagnosis of Chaohuperleidus was revised mainly based on newly recognized anatomical information, of which the following characters ‘the fused parietal and dermopterotic with anterior, middle and posterior pit-lines; the operculum and suboperculum of nearly equal in height with the latter having a large rounded anterior dorsal process’ were possible apomorphies of Chaohuperleidus. The previous taxonomic assignment of the Chaohuperleidus was confirmed, which was similar to the Ladinian (Middle Triassic) genus Perleidus but differed the latter in having more suborbitals, branchiostegal rays and epaxial fin rays besides its possible apomorphies. The skull pattern of the Chaohuperleridus primus was exhaustively reconstructed and was anatomically compared with the Early Triassic taxa which were wrongly classified into the Perleidiformes and some newly described stem neopterygians. The result herein will provide new anatomical evidences for the phylogeny analysis of the stem neopterygians that is open to discuss.
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Structural and Behavioral Characters of the Early Triassic Ichthyosauriformes from Chaohu, Anhui Province, and Their Implications on the Origin of Ichthyopterygia
LU Hao, JI Cheng, NI Peigang, ZHOU Min, FU Wanlu
Acta Scientiarum Naturalium Universitatis Pekinensis    2016, 52 (2): 234-240.   DOI: 10.13209/j.0479-8023.2015.115
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Ichthyosaurs, firstly appeared at the end of the Early Triassic. The previously reported Ichthyosaurs show very high level of adaptability to life in water, and their osteology shows structural characters that are fully adapted to life in water without any terrestrial characters that can relate them to their terrestrial ancestor. Two specimens are studied, one belonging to Cartorhynchus and the other to Chaohusaurus with embryos found from the Lower Triassic (Olenekian) of Chaohu, Anhui Province, South China. Based on studies of the number of presacral vertebra (i.e. 31), the ratio of snout length to skull length (i.e. 0.35), the ratio of forelimb length to presacral vertebra length (i.e. 0.45), and comparisons of these measurements and morphological characters with the derived Ichthyosaurs, Cartorhynchus is considered to be primitive in structural features and to have an amphibianlike habit. Combined with the analyses of the embryo-bearing specimens of the Early Triassic Chaohusaurus and the Jurassic Stenopterygius, Chaohusaurus appears more derives than Cartorhynchus in body structural characters and is fully adapted to life in water; however, Chaohusaurus retained a head-first birth posture when giving birth to offsprings. Therefore, during the evolution of Ichthyosaurs from terrestrial ancestors to marine types, the adaptive structural characters (such as flipper, and elongate snout) and the adaptive behavioral characters (such as the mode of reproduction) might have evolved in different tempo, and the former changed earlier.

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