Research Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, Anatomy Building, UCL, University College London, Gower Street, London WCIE 6BT, UK.
BMC Evol Biol. 2013 Sep 25;13:208. doi: 10.1186/1471-2148-13-208.
Lepidosauria (lizards, snakes, tuatara) is a globally distributed and ecologically important group of over 9,000 reptile species. The earliest fossil records are currently restricted to the Late Triassic and often dated to 227 million years ago (Mya). As these early records include taxa that are relatively derived in their morphology (e.g. Brachyrhinodon), an earlier unknown history of Lepidosauria is implied. However, molecular age estimates for Lepidosauria have been problematic; dates for the most recent common ancestor of all lepidosaurs range between approximately 226 and 289 Mya whereas estimates for crown-group Squamata (lizards and snakes) vary more dramatically: 179 to 294 Mya. This uncertainty restricts inferences regarding the patterns of diversification and evolution of Lepidosauria as a whole.
Here we report on a rhynchocephalian fossil from the Middle Triassic of Germany (Vellberg) that represents the oldest known record of a lepidosaur from anywhere in the world. Reliably dated to 238-240 Mya, this material is about 12 million years older than previously known lepidosaur records and is older than some but not all molecular clock estimates for the origin of lepidosaurs. Using RAG1 sequence data from 76 extant taxa and the new fossil specimens two of several calibrations, we estimate that the most recent common ancestor of Lepidosauria lived at least 242 Mya (238-249.5), and crown-group Squamata originated around 193 Mya (176-213).
A Early/Middle Triassic date for the origin of Lepidosauria disagrees with previous estimates deep within the Permian and suggests the group evolved as part of the faunal recovery after the end-Permain mass extinction as the climate became more humid. Our origin time for crown-group Squamata coincides with shifts towards warmer climates and dramatic changes in fauna and flora. Most major subclades within Squamata originated in the Cretaceous postdating major continental fragmentation. The Vellberg fossil locality is expected to become an important resource for providing a more balanced picture of the Triassic and for bridging gaps in the fossil record of several other major vertebrate groups.
有鳞目(蜥蜴、蛇、楔齿蜥)是一个分布广泛且在生态学上非常重要的爬行动物群体,包含超过 9000 种物种。目前最早的化石记录仅限于晚三叠世,通常可追溯到 2.27 亿年前。由于这些早期记录包括在形态上相对衍生的分类群(例如短吻鳄蜥),因此暗示有鳞目具有更早的未知历史。然而,有鳞目分子年龄的估计一直存在问题;所有有鳞类动物最近共同祖先的日期在大约 2.26 到 2.89 百万年前,而冠群有鳞目(蜥蜴和蛇)的估计则更为显著:1.79 到 2.94 百万年前。这种不确定性限制了对有鳞目整体多样化和进化模式的推断。
在这里,我们报告了来自德国中三叠世的一种喙头蜥化石,这是来自世界各地有鳞目最古老的记录。该化石可靠地定年为 2.38-2.40 百万年前,比以前已知的有鳞目记录早约 1200 万年,比一些但不是所有分子钟估计的有鳞目起源更早。使用来自 76 个现存分类群的 RAG1 序列数据和新的化石标本,我们对两个校准中的两个进行了多次校准,估计有鳞目最近的共同祖先至少生活在 2.42 百万年前(238-249.5),而冠群有鳞目起源于大约 1.93 百万年前(176-213)。
有鳞目起源的早/中三叠世日期与以前在二叠纪深处的估计不一致,表明该群体是在二叠纪末期大规模灭绝后气候变得更加潮湿时作为动物群恢复的一部分进化而来的。我们对冠群有鳞目的起源时间与向温暖气候的转变以及动植物群的巨大变化相吻合。有鳞目的大多数主要亚目起源于白垩纪,晚于主要大陆分裂。预计维勒贝格化石地点将成为提供更平衡的三叠纪图片的重要资源,并弥补其他几个主要脊椎动物群化石记录中的空白。