Sauropterygia
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
Sauropterygia ("lizard flippers") was an extinct group of water-dwelling reptiles. They evolved from land reptiles after the end-Permian extinction. These creatures lived during the Triassic period. Most went extinct by the end of the Triassic, but one group, the Plesiosauria, survived until the end of the Mesozoic. They disappeared in the end-Cretaceous mass extinction.
What made sauropterygians special was their body design. They had strong flippers to swim through the water. Some types, like the pliosaurs, also had strong back flippers for better movement. Scientists are still learning how these reptiles are connected to others. Some think they might be close to turtles. Others suggest links to Lepidosauromorpha, Archosauromorpha, or marine groups like Thalattosauria and Ichthyosauromorpha.
Origins and evolution
The earliest sauropterygians appeared about 247 million years ago, at the start of the Middle Triassic. Early examples were small, semi-aquatic lizard-like animals with long limbs (pachypleurosaurs), but they quickly grew larger and spread into shallow waters (nothosaurs). The Triassic-Jurassic extinction event wiped them out except for the plesiosaurs. During the Early Jurassic, these diversified quickly into both long-necked small-headed plesiosaurs and short-necked large-headed pliosaurs.
Classification of sauropterygians has been difficult because the same features evolved multiple times among reptiles, an example of convergent evolution. Sauropterygians are diapsids, and since the late 1990s, scientists have suggested that they may be closely related to turtles. Several analyses since the beginning of the 2010s have suggested that they are more closely related to archosaurs (birds and crocodilians) than to lepidosaurs (lizards and snakes). Some authors have suggested that sauropterygians form a clade with two other groups of marine reptiles, Ichthyosauromorpha and Thalattosauria.
Ecology
Placodonts probably used their round teeth to eat hard-shelled animals. Eosauropterygians are thought to have eaten fish and other animals.
Images
Related articles
This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Sauropterygia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.
Images from Wikimedia Commons. Tap any image to view credits and license.
Safekipedia