Other Definitions
therapsida (dict)

Therapsida

Biarmosuchia
Dinocephalia
Anomodontia
Gorgonopsia
Therocephalia
Cynodontia Therapsids, previously known as the "mammal-like reptiles", are an order of synapsids. Traditionally, synapsids were referred to as reptiles, however when the term is used cladistically the taxon also includes the mammals, which are descended from the cynodont therapsids. Therapsids became the dominant land animals during the Middle Permian, and consisted of three major clades, the dinocephalians, the herbivorous anomodonts, and the mostly carnivorous theriodonts, with the carnivorous biarmosuchians as a paraphyletic assemblage of primitive forms. After a brief burst of evolutionary diversity, the dinocephalians died out in the later Middle Permian (Guadalupian), but the anomodont dicynodonts and the theriodont gorgonopsians and therocephalians flourished, and were joined at the very end of the Permian by the first cynodonts. Like all land animals, the therapsids were seriously affected by the end Permian extinction event, with the very successful gorgonopsians dying out altogether, and the remaining groups being represented by only one or two families of a few species each surviving into the Triassic. Of these, the dicynodonts, now represented by a single family of large stocky herbivores, the Kannemeyeridae, and the medium-sized cynodonts (including both carnivorous and herbivorous forms), flourished worldwide throughout the Early and Middle Triassic, but then died out across much of Pangea at the end of the Carnian (Late Triassic), although they continued for some time longer in the wet equatorial band and the south. Some exceptions were the yet still further derived eucynodonts. At least three groups of them survived.
  1. The extremely mammal-like family, Tritylodontidae, survived into the Early Cretaceous.
  2. An extremely mammal-like family, Tritheledontidae, are unknown later than the Early Jurassic.
  3. The third group, Morganucodon and similar animals, were stem-mammals.

External links

References

  • Benton, M. J. (2004), Vertebrate Paleontology, 3rd ed. Blackwell Science Ltd
  • Carroll, R. L. (1988) Vertebrate Paleontology & Evolution, W.H. Freeman & Company, NY
  • Romer, A.S. (1966) Vertebrate Paleontology University of Chicago Press, 1933; 3rd ed.

 

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