Evidence of osteomyelitis in the dentary of the late Triassic rhynchocephalian Clevosaurus brasiliensis (Lepidosauria: Rhynchocephalia) from southern Brazil and behavioural implications |
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Authors: | Paulo R Romo-de-Vivar-Martínez Agustín G Martinelli Voltaire D Paes Neto Marina B Soares |
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Institution: | 1. Programa de Pós-Gradua??o em Geociências, Instituto de Geociências, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, 9500 Agronomia, Porto Alegre, RS, CEP 91501-970, Brazilpaulo.rorvm@gmail.com;3. Programa de Pós-Gradua??o em Geociências, Instituto de Geociências, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, 9500 Agronomia, Porto Alegre, RS, CEP 91501-970, Brazil;4. Departamento de Paleontologia e Estratigrafia, Instituto de Geociências, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Avenida Bento Gon?alves, 9500 Agronomia, Porto Alegre, RS, CEP 91501-970, Brazil |
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Abstract: | Clevosaurus was a cosmopolitan Rhynchocephalia genus restricted to the Late Triassic and the Early Jurassic. In Brazil, C. brasiliensis is one of the most conspicuous species collected from the Candelária Sequence (Riograndia Assemblage Zone, Norian age) of the Santa Maria Supersequence. Several jaws of C. brasiliensis are housed in the Laboratório de Paleontologia de Vertebrados of the Instituto de Geociências-UFRGS. Some of these jaws bear a relatively small protuberant bony callus on the anterolateral margin of the dentary, evidenced by a different tissue pattern incorporating small pits and discrete grooves. This pattern closely resembles a common bone infection known in the mandible of the extant Sphenodon punctatus. Although this similarity, the infection may be the result of two possible processes: as consequence of orthal jaw shearing movements during feeding at the moments that the dentary impacts with the enlarged premaxillary tooth or due to injuries produced after fights between conspecific individuals (as is the case for S. punctatus). If the second hypothesis is correct, the same pathological processes probably occurred in the Late Triassic C. brasiliensis indicating that similar ethological conditions were already present at the beginning of the Mesozoic, during the initial radiation of the lepidosaurian clade. |
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Keywords: | Rhynchocephalia Clevosaurus paleopathology osteomyelitis Triassic Brazil |
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