Neha Patil (Editor)

Crocodyliformes

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Kingdom
  
Superorder
  
Higher classification
  
Phylum
  
Chordata

Scientific name
  
Crocodyliformes

Crocodyliformes httpspbstwimgcommediaAuERapqCMAEbjDYjpg

Clade
  
CrocodyliformesHay, 1930

Lower classifications
  
Thalattosuchia, Baurusuchidae, Dakosaurus, Metriorhynchus, Protosuchidae

Crocodyliformes is a clade of crurotarsan archosaurs, the group often traditionally referred to as "crocodilians". They are the only members of Crocodylomorpha who survived beyond the Early Jurassic, while the crocodylomorphs were the only Pseudosuchia group who survived the Triassicā€“Jurassic extinction event.

In 1988, Michael J. Benton and James M. Clark argued that all traditional names for well-known groups of animals should be restricted to their crown clades, that is, used only for natural groups comprising all living members of any given lineage. This posed a problem for the crocodilians, because the name Crocodylia, while used in various ways by various scientists, had always included not only living crocodilians but many of their extinct ancestors known only from the fossil record.

Benton and Clark's solution to this issue was to restrict the name Crocodylia to the group containing modern alligators, crocodiles, and gharials, plus any extinct members of those specific families. The traditional group "Crocodylia" was replaced with the name Crocodyliformes, which included many of the extinct families that the new definition left out. Clark and Benton did not initially provide an exact definition for Crocodyliformes; but, in 2001, Paul Sereno and colleagues defined it as the clade including Protosuchus richardsoni and the Nile crocodile, plus all descendants of their common ancestor.

Crocodyliformes FileLarge crocodyliformessvg Wikimedia Commons

Chris Brochu agreed with the assessment that Crocodylia as a name has never had stable contents, and that a series of clades larger than the crown group Crocodylia (including Crocodyliformes and the slightly more inclusive clade Crocodylomorpha) was a good solution. However, in a 2008 paper, Jeremy Martin and Benton, the authors reversed the previous opinion (co-authored by Benton) that Crocodylia should be restricted to the crown group, suggesting that Crocodyliformes should be considered a synonym of a more inclusive Crocodylia, and thus replaced. Brochu and colleagues rejected this proposal, arguing that the crown deļ¬nition of Crocodylia is the standard meaning both within and beyond the crocodyliform systematics community.

Crocodyliformes Crocodyliformes in black and noncrocodyliforms in grey Full red

Phylogeny

Below is a simplified cladogram based on Fiorelli and Calvo (2007).

Crocodyliformes Stammesgeschichte der Krokodile Wikiwand


In 2012, paleontologists Mario Bronzati, Felipe Chinaglia Montefeltro, and Max C. Langer conducted a broad phylogenetic analysis to produce supertrees of Crocodyliformes, including 184 species. The most parsimonious trees were highly resolved, meaning the phylogenetic relationships found in the analysis were highly likely. Below is a consensus tree from the study:

References

Crocodyliformes Wikipedia