South Australian Museum, North Terrace, Adelaide, SA 5001, Australia.
Biol Lett. 2012 Aug 23;8(4):665-9. doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2011.1216. Epub 2012 Jan 25.
Tikiguania estesi is widely accepted to be the earliest member of Squamata, the reptile group that includes lizards and snakes. It is based on a lower jaw from the Late Triassic of India, described as a primitive lizard related to agamids and chamaeleons. However, Tikiguania is almost indistinguishable from living agamids; a combined phylogenetic analysis of morphological and molecular data places it with draconines, a prominent component of the modern Asian herpetofauna. It is unlikely that living agamids have retained the Tikiguania morphotype unchanged for over 216 Myr; it is much more conceivable that Tikiguania is a Quaternary or Late Tertiary agamid that was preserved in sediments derived from the Triassic beds that have a broad superficial exposure. This removes the only fossil evidence for lizards in the Triassic. Studies that have employed Tikiguana for evolutionary, biogeographical and molecular dating inferences need to be reassessed.
Tikiguania estesi 被广泛认为是爬行动物蜥蜴类和蛇类的最古老成员。它基于印度晚三叠世的一个下颚,被描述为一种与鬣蜥和变色龙有关的原始蜥蜴。然而,Tikiguania 与现存的鬣蜥几乎无法区分;形态学和分子数据的综合系统发育分析将其与 draconines 放在一起,draconines 是现代亚洲爬行动物区系的一个重要组成部分。生活中的鬣蜥不太可能在超过 2.16 亿年的时间里保持不变的 Tikiguania 形态;更有可能的是,Tikiguania 是一种第四纪或晚第三纪的鬣蜥,保存在源自具有广泛表面暴露的三叠纪地层的沉积物中。这就消除了三叠纪中唯一的蜥蜴化石证据。需要重新评估那些将 Tikiguana 用于进化、生物地理和分子定年推断的研究。