Occidens portlocki explained

Occidens is an extinct genus of stem tetrapod from the Early Carboniferous (Tournaisian) Altagoan Formation of Northern Ireland. It is known from a single type species, Occidens portlocki, named in 2004 on the basis of a left lower jaw described by British geologist Joseph Ellison Portlock in 1843.

History

The holotype, a left lower jaw, was discovered in Northern Ireland in 1843 by Joseph Ellison Portlock, and Portlock (1843) attributed the specimen to the lobe-finned fish Holoptychius, and it was housed in the collections of the British Geological Survey for over a century before being reevaluated. In 2004, it was redescribed by vertebrate paleontologists Jenny Clack and Per E. Ahlberg, who reclassified it as a new genus and species of early tetrapod. They established the genus name Occidens, referring to its presence west of better-known early tetrapod assemblages in Great Britain. The species name honors Portlock.

The jaw likely comes from the Altagoan Formation and, based on an analysis of fossilized pollen, dates to the late Tournaisian stage of the Early Carboniferous about 350 million years ago. The occurrence of Occidens in the Tournaisian makes it a critically important taxon because it lies within Romer's gap, a time interval spanning most of the Early Carboniferous in which few tetrapod fossils are known. Romer's gap separates the first appearance of tetrapods in the Late Devonian from the group's first evolutionary radiation toward the end of the Early Carboniferous. However, the relationship of Occidens to other early tetrapods both before and after the gap remain uncertain, which means that its context in tetrapod evolution remains unknown.

Description

Clack and Ahlberg noted several distinctive features of Occidens, including a straight row of teeth along the coronoid bones on the inner surface of the lower jaw, an open groove for a lateral line sense organ on the jaw's outer surface, and a stepped shape to the connection between the dentary and angular bones. The jaw bone is deep, resembling those of Crassigyrinus and whatcheeriids (which both occur in Romer's gap) in overall appearance.

Classification

In most phylogenetic trees produced by Clack and Ahlberg's 2004 analysis, Occidens fell near whatcheeriids and the Devonian taxon Tulerpeton, being more derived than all other Devonian taxa and more basal than Crassigyrinus and the post-Romer's Gap taxa Greererpeton and Megalocephalus.[1] A 2008 phylogenetic analysis by paleontologists Marcello Ruta and John Bolt found Occidens to be the closest relative of Sigournea multidentata, a species from the end of the gap found in Iowa, but could not determine where these two taxa fit relative to other Early Carboniferous tetrapods.[2]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Clack, J.A. . Recent Advances in the Origin and Early Radiation of Vertebrates . Ahlberg, P.E. . Verlag Dr. Friedrich Pfeil . 2004 . Arratia, G. . München . 309–320 . A new stem tetrapod from the Early Carboniferous of Northern Ireland . Wilson, M.V.H. . Cloutier, R. . https://web.archive.org/web/20140714120906/http://verlag-pfeil.de/07pala/pdf/3_52d14.pdf . 14 July 2014.
  2. Ruta . M. . Bolt . J. R. . 10.4202/app.2008.0403 . The brachyopoid Hadrokkosaurus bradyi from the Early Middle Triassic of Arizona, and a phylogenetic analysis of lower jaw characters in temnospondyl amphibians . Acta Palaeontologica Polonica . 53 . 4 . 579 . 2008 . free .