An ancestral turtle from the Late Triassic of southwestern China.

Bibliographic Details
Title: An ancestral turtle from the Late Triassic of southwestern China.
Authors: Li, Chun1, Wu, Xiao-Chun2, Rieppel, Olivier3, Wang, Li-Ting4, Zhao, Li-Jun5
Source: Nature. 11/27/2008, Vol. 456 Issue 7221, p497-501. 5p. 3 Diagrams.
Subject Terms: *REPTILE evolution, *TURTLE anatomy, *FOSSIL turtles, *BIOLOGICAL evolution, *TRIASSIC stratigraphic geology, *PHYLOGENY, *MARINE sediments
Geographic Terms: CHINA
Abstract: The origin of the turtle body plan remains one of the great mysteries of reptile evolution. The anatomy of turtles is highly derived, which renders it difficult to establish the relationships of turtles with other groups of reptiles. The oldest known turtle, Proganochelys from the Late Triassic period of Germany, has a fully formed shell and offers no clue as to its origin. Here we describe a new 220-million-year-old turtle from China, somewhat older than Proganochelys, that documents an intermediate step in the evolution of the shell and associated structures. A ventral plastron is fully developed, but the dorsal carapace consists of neural plates only. The dorsal ribs are expanded, and osteoderms are absent. The new species shows that the plastron evolved before the carapace and that the first step of carapace formation is the ossification of the neural plates coupled with a broadening of the ribs. This corresponds to early embryonic stages of carapace formation in extant turtles, and shows that the turtle shell is not derived from a fusion of osteoderms. Phylogenetic analysis places the new species basal to all known turtles, fossil and extant. The marine deposits that yielded the fossils indicate that this primitive turtle inhabited marginal areas of the sea or river deltas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Database: Academic Search Complete
More Details
ISSN:00280836
DOI:10.1038/nature07533
Published in:Nature
Language:English