Jump to content

Tika giacchinoi

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Tika
Temporal range:Late CretaceousCenomanian
Scientific classificationEdit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Rhynchocephalia
Family: Sphenodontidae
Genus: Tika
Apesteguía, Garberoglio & Gómez, 2021
Species:
T. giacchinoi
Binomial name
Tika giacchinoi
Apesteguía, Garberoglio & Gómez, 2021

Tikais anextinctgenusofsphenodontianfrom theLate CretaceousCandeleros Formationof Argentina. The type species isTika giacchinoi.It is considered to be closely related to thetuatara,(Sphenodon punctatus), and a member of theSphenodontinae.It is the oldest member of Sphenodontinae known from South America.[1]

Description

[edit]

The type specimen consists of a partial skeleton including an incomplete right-lower jaw, and parts of the skull (an incomplete leftpalatineand a rightquadrate), two articulateddorsal vertebrae,an incomplete ulna, as well as a humerus and a femur. Referred material includes twomaxillaswith associated lower jaws. The skull is estimated to have been around 3.9–4.2 centimetres (1.5–1.7 in) long when complete, makingTikamoderately-sized among sphenodontians. The caniniform tooth at the front of the lower jaw is sharper than that of the tuatara. The maxilla is similar to that of the tuatara in its overall form. The palate has a row of conical teeth, similar to that of the tuatara.[1]

Taxonomy

[edit]

Tikawas recovered as a member ofSphenodontinae,in apolytomywithCynosphenodon,Kawasphenodon,andSphenodon(the tuatara).[1]

Ecology

[edit]

Tikais one of two sphenodontians known from the Candeleros Formation, alongside the distantly related herbivorous sphenodontianPriosphenodon.Like other sphenodontines, Tika is thought to have been carnivorous and to have fed on insects and possibly small vertebrates.[1]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcdApesteguía, Sebastián; Garberoglio, Fernando F.; Gómez, Raúl O. (30 September 2021)."Earliest Tuatara Relative (Lepidosauria: Sphenodontinae) from Southern Continents".Ameghiniana.58(5).doi:10.5710/amgh.13.07.2021.3442.ISSN0002-7014.S2CID239053594.