Biology:Diplodocoidea

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Short description: Extinct superfamily of dinosaurs

Diplodocoidea
Temporal range: Middle Jurassic–Late Cretaceous, 174–93 Ma
Possible Turonian Record [1]
Skeletons of Apatosaurus and Diplodocus
Holotype skeletons of Diplodocus carnegii and Apatosaurus louisae, Carnegie Museum of Natural History
Scientific classification e
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Clade: Dinosauria
Clade: Saurischia
Clade: Sauropodomorpha
Clade: Sauropoda
Clade: Neosauropoda
Superfamily: Diplodocoidea
Marsh, 1884
Type species
Diplodocus longus
Marsh, 1878
Subgroups
Synonyms
  • Rebbachisauroidea
    Bonaparte, 1997

Diplodocoidea is a superfamily of sauropod dinosaurs, which included some of the longest animals of all time, including slender giants like Supersaurus, Diplodocus, Apatosaurus, and Amphicoelias. Most had very long necks and long, whip-like tails; however, one family (the dicraeosaurids) are the only known sauropods to have re-evolved a short neck, presumably an adaptation for feeding low to the ground. This adaptation was taken to the extreme in the highly specialized sauropod Brachytrachelopan. A study of snout shape and dental microwear in diplodocoids showed that the square snouts, large proportion of pits, and fine subparallel scratches in Apatosaurus, Diplodocus, Nigersaurus, and Rebbachisaurus suggest ground-height nonselective browsing; the narrow snouts of Dicraeosaurus, Suuwassea, and Tornieria and the coarse scratches and gouges on the teeth of Dicraeosaurus suggest mid-height selective browsing in those taxa.[2] This taxon is also noteworthy because diplodocoid sauropods had the highest tooth replacement rates of any vertebrates, as exemplified by Nigersaurus, which had new teeth erupting every 30 days.[3]

Most diplodocoids belong to Diplodocimorpha, a name first used by Calvo & Salgado (1995), who defined it as "Rebbachisaurus tessonei sp. nov., Diplodocidae, and all descendants of their common ancestor." The group was not used often, and was synonymized with Diplodocoidea as the groups were often found to have the same content. In 2005, Mike P. Taylor and Darren Naish reviewed diplodocoid phylogeny and taxonomy, and realized that Diplodocimorpha could not be synonymized with Diplodocoidea. Whereas the former was defined node-based, the latter was branch-based.[4] Haplocanthosaurus and possibly Amphicoelias are non-diplodocimorph diplodocoids.[5]

Taxonomy

The below taxonomy follows the study of Emanuel Tschopp, Octavio Mateus and Roger Benson, 2015:[6]

The phylogenetics of Diplodocoidea were reviewed in 2015 with a specimen-level phylogenetic analysis, as well as a species-level analysis. Their cladistic analysis is shown below.[6]

Diplodocoidea

Haplocanthosaurus priscus Haplocanthosaurus.jpg

Diplodocimorpha
Rebbachisauridae

Zapalasaurus bonapartei

Limaysaurinae

Cathartesaura anaerobica

Limaysaurus tessonei

Nigersaurinae

Nigersaurus taqueti Nigersaurus BW.jpg

Demandasaurus darwini

Flagellicaudata
Dicraeosauridae

Dyslocosaurus polyonychius

Suuwassea emilieae

Dystrophaeus viaemalae

Brachytrachelopan mesai Brachytrachelopan BW.jpg

Tharosaurus indicus Tharosaurus UDL.png

Amargasaurus cazaui Amargasaurus NT small (mirrored).jpg

Dicraeosaurus hansemanni Dicraeosaurus hansemanni22 flipped.jpg

Diplodocidae

Amphicoelias altus

Apatosaurinae

?Apatosaurinae gen. et sp. nov.

Apatosaurus ajax Apatosaurus Silhouette.svg

Apatosaurus louisae Apatosaurus louisae by durbed flipped.jpg

Brontosaurus excelsus Brontosaurus by Tom Parker.png

Brontosaurus yahnahpin

Brontosaurus parvus Apatosaurus Clean.png

Diplodocinae

?Diplodocinae gen. et sp. nov.

Tornieria africana

Supersaurus lourinhanensis

Supersaurus vivianae Supersaurus dinosaur.png

Leinkupal laticauda

Galeamopus hayi

Diplodocus carnegiei Diplodocus carnegii flipped.jpg

Diplodocus hallorum

Kaatedocus siberi

Barosaurus lentus

References

Wikidata ☰ Q132904 entry