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1 December 2005 Correlated trends in the evolution of the plesiosaur locomotor system
F. Robin O'Keefe, Matthew T. Carrano
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Abstract

This paper investigates trends in the evolution of body size and shape in the Plesiosauria, a diverse clade of Mesozoic marine reptiles. Using measures from well-preserved plesiosaur specimens, we document and interpret evolutionary patterns in relative head size, body size, and locomotor variables. Size increase is a significant trend in the clade as a whole, and in constituent clades. The trend in relative head size is of variance increase; observed head sizes are both smaller and larger than ancestral values. In the locomotor system, changes in propodial and girdle proportions appear concomitant with body size increase and are interpreted as allometric responses to the physical constraints of large body size. Other trends in the locomotor system are significantly correlated with both body size and relative head size. These locomotor trends evolved convergently in several clades of plesiosaurs, and may have had an ecomorphological basis, although data are lacking to constrain speculation on this point. The evolution of the locomotor system in plesiosaurs sheds new light on the response of aquatic tetrapods to the physical constraints of foraging at large body size.

F. Robin O'Keefe and Matthew T. Carrano "Correlated trends in the evolution of the plesiosaur locomotor system," Paleobiology 31(4), 656-675, (1 December 2005). https://doi.org/10.1666/04021.1
Accepted: 19 January 2005; Published: 1 December 2005
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