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Historical Zoogeography of the Eusuchian Crocodilians: A Physiological Perspective
Authors:TAPLIN, L. E.   GRIGG, G. C.
Affiliation:Queensland National Parks and Wildlife Service, Northern Regional Centre Marlow St., Pallarenda, Qld, 4810, Australia
School of Biological Sciences, Zoology A08, University of Sydney NSW, 2006, Australia
Abstract:The historical zoogeography of eusuchian crocodilians has rarelybeen reviewed in any detail and yet is of increasing interestto students of crocodilian biology as large amounts of comparativeinformation on a wide range of species come to hand. Previousinterpretations of crocodilian zoogeography have been basedon one or another of two assumptions–that the major continentalland masses have remained more or less fixed in position, andthat the eusuchians have had only very limited powers of dispersalacross marine barriers. Both of these assumptions are inappropriatein light of our present knowledge of continental drift and crocodilianphysiology. In this paper we attempt a reinterpretation of eusuchian zoogeographybased on new information on their systematic relationships,physiological capacity for marine dispersal, and fossil history.We postulate that anatomical and physiological adaptations toa marine existence have played an important role in eusuchianhistory. We propose that Gavialis and Tomistoma, now restrictedto fresh waters, may have been derived secondarily from ancestorsadapted to salt water. In the case of Tomistoma, similaritiesin lingual gland and buccal cavity anatomy to the true crocodiles(Crocodylus and Osteolaemus) suggest that marine adaptationspredated the divergence of tomistomine and crocodyline stocks.The buccal morphology of Gavialis suggests it also has a marineancestry. Its systematic affinities are uncertain, lying perhapswith Tomistoma or, on other interpretations, with the Mesosuchia.In both cases, the fossil record is not inconsistent with thispossibility. Palaeontological information now available is inadequate toreconstruct the evolutionary history of the Eusuchia in detail.However, saltwater adapted eusuchians are more common in thefossil record than is widely recognized and the likelihood ofdispersal across marine "barriers" by non-alligatorid crocodilianscannot be ignored.
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