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A stem acrodontan lizard in the Cretaceous of Brazil revises early lizard evolution in Gondwana

Tiago R. Simões (), Everton Wilner, Michael W. Caldwell, Luiz C. Weinschütz and Alexander W. A. Kellner
Additional contact information
Tiago R. Simões: University of Alberta
Everton Wilner: Centro Paleontológico da UnC (CENPALEO), Universidade do Contestado
Michael W. Caldwell: University of Alberta
Luiz C. Weinschütz: Centro Paleontológico da UnC (CENPALEO), Universidade do Contestado
Alexander W. A. Kellner: Laboratory of Systematics and Taphonomy of Fossil Vertebrates, Museu Nacional/Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Quinta da Boa Vista s/n

Nature Communications, 2015, vol. 6, issue 1, 1-8

Abstract: Abstract Iguanians are one of the most diverse groups of extant lizards (>1,700 species) with acrodontan iguanians dominating in the Old World, and non-acrodontans in the New World. A new lizard species presented herein is the first acrodontan from South America, indicating acrodontans radiated throughout Gondwana much earlier than previously thought, and that some of the first South American lizards were more closely related to their counterparts in Africa and Asia than to the modern fauna of South America. This suggests both groups of iguanians achieved a worldwide distribution before the final breakup of Pangaea. At some point, non-acrodontans replaced acrodontans and became the only iguanians in the Americas, contrary to what happened on most of the Old World. This discovery also expands the diversity of Cretaceous lizards in South America, which with recent findings, suggests sphenodontians were not the dominant lepidosaurs in that continent as previously hypothesized.

Date: 2015
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DOI: 10.1038/ncomms9149

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