PALAEOZOIC FISH UK
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 THE MAMMAL LIKE REPTILES

The word Dicynodont means "two dog teeth". The dicynodonts were the most successful of the therapsids in terms of phylogenetic longevity, numbers of individuals, and the extent of distribution. In fact they were the most successful and wide-ranging group of plant-eating animals of the time. They first appeared in the mid Permian and by the late Permian they were among the commonest of all tetrapods. They were greatly decimated by the increasingly harsh conditions of the terminal Permian, and only two lineages survived into the Early Triassic. Although fossils in Australia suggest they may have survived as late as the Cretaceaous.

 

p-dicyno.jpg (70446 bytes)      p-dicy2.jpg (46551 bytes)          Dicynodont   Permian    Russia

 

dicysa1.jpg (75407 bytes)    dicysa2.jpg (76374 bytes)   dicysa3.jpg (55323 bytes)    Lystrosaurus  L. Triassic, Karoo,  South Africa

 

The body was short and broad, and was supported in the typical therapsid fashion by strong thick limbs. Their heads had two small downward pointing tusks and a blunt beak like a tortoise. Most of the Dicynodont skeleton is reptile like but the presence of a single hole in the side of the skull behind the eye socket that is typical of mammals. The way that their back legs are located directly beneath their body instead of splaying out sideways is also more like a mammal than a reptile. Furthermore, in some species only the males have tusks, this type of sexual dimorphism is also typical of mammals. Dicyodonts probably lived near rivers and lakes and were herbivores grazing the coarse vegetation on the banks (tearing it off with their beaks and grinding it between their jaws that could slide backwards and forwards.)

 The advanced development of their skulls and jaws was the main factor in the success of these animals. The temporal openings at the back of the skull that are shared by all synapsids were greatly enlarged, so that the remaining bone formed long arches. These large openings supported very powerful jaw muscles. The dicynodonts skull is striking because of its light
open construction and the presence of long, bony bars rather than broad plate-like areas behind the eye.

 The dentition of these therapsids was unique. The front of the skull and the lower jaw were narrow and beak-like. Apart from a pair of large, upper tusks in some species, teeth were reduced to tiny remnants or were completely absent.

Notes on restoration of Russian  skull. 1 tusk, minor area of the premax  a little on the thiner parts of the jugals, and there are no lacrimals.

 

FURTHER READING

Gillian King: The Dicynodonts: