RESUMEN
Viviparity is a widespread reproductive trait in snakes, although fossil evidence bearing on its evolution is extremely sparse. Here, we report an exceptional specimen of the minute booid snake Messelophis variatus recovered in the paleolake of the Messel Formation (early-middle Eocene, Germany). This gravid female contains at least two embryos located in the posterior third of the trunk region. The morphology, size, and degree of ossification of the cranial and postcranial remains indicate they correspond with late embryos. This specimen documents the first occurrence of viviparity in a fossil snake and extends the temporal distribution of this reproductive strategy in booid snakes by over 47 Ma. The evolution of viviparity in squamates has traditionally been associated with cold climates, but its presence at the dawn of the evolution of booids during early Palaeogene thermal peaks indicates that viviparity may have evolved under different selective pressures in this clade.
Asunto(s)
Nacimiento Vivo , Serpientes , Animales , Femenino , Embarazo , Serpientes/anatomía & histología , Fósiles , Cráneo/anatomía & histología , Fenotipo , Evolución Biológica , Viviparidad de Animales no Mamíferos , FilogeniaRESUMEN
Extant large constrictors, pythons and boas, have a wholly allopatric distribution that has been interpreted largely in terms of vicariance in Gondwana. Here, we describe a stem pythonid based on complete skeletons from the early-middle Eocene of Messel, Germany. The new species is close in age to the divergence of Pythonidae from North American Loxocemus and corroborates a Laurasian origin and dispersal of pythons. Remarkably, it existed in sympatry with the stem boid Eoconstrictor. These occurrences demonstrate that neither dispersal limitation nor strong competitive interactions were decisive in structuring biogeographic patterns early in the history of large, hyper-macrostomatan constrictors and exemplify the synergy between phylogenomic and palaeontological approaches in reconstructing past distributions.
Asunto(s)
Boidae , Animales , Europa (Continente) , Alemania , Filogenia , SimpatríaRESUMEN
BACKGROUND: Abundant pan-trionychid (soft-shell) turtles specimens have been found in Eocene sequences of central Europe, particularly from two localities in Germany, the Messel Pit (a UNESCO World Natural Heritage Site) and Geiseltal, traditionally attributed to Trionyx messelianus or Rafetoides austriacus. Over the last two decades new specimens of this taxon from these two localities have been discovered and fully prepared. However, they have remained unstudied, as well as their phylogenetic position inside Pan-Trionychidae is unknown. RESULTS: Five new specimens of Palaeoamyda messeliana nov. comb. from Messel Pit and Geiseltal localities are fully described here. A revised diagnosis for the species is also presented here, together with its inclusion in a phylogenetic analysis of Pan-Trionychidae that shows that this species is sister to the extant Amyda cartilaginea, one of the most abundant pan-trionychid (soft-shell) turtles from Asia, both members of the clade Chitrini. The specimens described in here are among the best and most complete fossil pan-trionychid skeletons so far known.