Placodonts ("
tabletteeth") are an
extinctorder of marine
reptiles that lived during the
Triassic period, becoming extinct at the end of the period. They were part of
Sauropterygia, the group that includes
plesiosaurs. Placodonts were generally between 1 and 2 m (3 ft 3 in and 6 ft 7 in) in length, with some of the largest measuring 3 m (9.8 ft) long.
The earliest forms, like Placodus, which lived in the early to middle
Triassic, resembled barrel-bodied lizards superficially similar to the
marine iguana of today, but larger. In contrast to the marine iguana, which feeds on
algae, the placodonts ate
molluscs and so their teeth were flat and tough to crush shells. In the earliest periods, their size was probably enough to keep away the top sea predators of the time: the
sharks.[citation needed] However, as time passed, other kinds of carnivorous reptiles began to colonize the seas, such as
ichthyosaurs and
nothosaurs, and later placodonts developed bony plates on their backs to protect their bodies while feeding. By the Late Triassic, these plates had grown so much that placodonts of the time, such as Henodus and Placochelys, resembled the
sea turtles of the modern day more than their ancestors without bony plates. Other placodonts, like Psephoderma, developed plates as well, but in a different articulated manner that resembled the carapace of
horseshoe crabs more than those of sea turtles. All these adaptations can be counted as perfect examples of
convergent evolution, as placodonts were not related to any of these animals.
Because of their dense bone and heavy armour plating, these creatures would have been too heavy to float in the ocean and would have used a lot of energy to reach the water surface. For this reason, and because of the type of sediment found accompanying their
fossils, it is suggested that they lived in shallow waters and not in deep oceans.
Their diet consisted of marine
bivalves,
brachiopods, and other invertebrates. They were notable for their large, flat, often protruding
teeth, which they used to crush the molluscs and brachiopods that they hunted on the sea bed (another way in which they were similar to
walruses). The palate teeth were adapted for this
durophagous diet, being extremely thick and large enough to crush thick shell.
Henodus, however, differs from other placodonts in having developed unique
baleen-like denticles, which alongside features of the hyoid and jaw musculature suggest that it was a
filter feeder.[1][2] Recent comparisons to Atopodentatus suggest that it was a
herbivore as well, bearing a similar broad jaw shape, albeit it obtained plant matter through filter-feeding it from the substrates.[3] The group was once believed to be restricted to the western
Tethys, but the discovery of Sinocyamodus xinpuensis in China overturned this view.[4]
Additionally, the name Placodontiformes was erected for the clade that includes Palatodonta and Placodontia. Palatodonta, from the early Middle Triassic of the Netherlands, was a marine sauropterygian that was very similar to placodonts, but Palatodonta has teeth that are small and pointed instead of broad and flat.
The clade Helveticosauroidea was previously considered to be a basal superfamily of placodonts with the sole member Helveticosaurus. However, it is now thought that Helveticosaurus was not a placodont but possibly an unusual member of the
Archosauromorpha.[citation needed]
Phylogeny
The cladogram below follows the result found by Rainer Schoch and Hans-Dieter Sues in 2015.[6]
^Wang, Wei; Li, Chun & Wu, Xian-Chun (10 December 2018). "An adult specimen of Sinocyamodus xinpuensis (Sauropterygia: Placodontia) from Guanling, Guizhou, China". Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. 185 (3): 910–924.
doi:
10.1093/zoolinnean/zly080.
^De Miguel Chaves, Carlos; Ortega, Francisco & Pérez-García, Adán (2018). "A new placodont from the Upper Triassic of Spain provides new insights on the acquisition of the specialized skull of Henodontidae". Papers in Palaeontology. 4 (4): 567–576.
Bibcode:
2018PPal....4..567D.
doi:
10.1002/spp2.1218.
S2CID133679210.
Bardet, N. (1995). "Evolution et extinction des reptiles marins au cours du Mesozoique". Palaeovertebrata (24): 177–283.
Huene, F. von (1933). "Die Placodontier. 4. Zur Lebensweise und Verwandtschaft von Placodus". Abhandlungen der Senckenbergischen Naturforschenden Gesellschaft (in German) (38): 365–382.
Mazin, J.-M. (1986). "Negevodus ramonensis n. g. n. sp., un nouveau placodonte du Trias moyen du Negev (Israel)". 302. Comptes Rendus de l'Académie des Sciences, Série II: 927–929. {{
cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (
help)
Mazin, J.-M. & Pinna, G. (1993). "Palaeoecology of the armoured placodonts". Paleontologia Lombarda. New Series. 2: 83–91.
Nosotti, S. & Pinna, G. (1993a). "Cyamodus kuhn-schnyderi n. sp., nouvelle espèce de Cyamodontidae (Reptilia, Placodontia) du Muschelkalk supérieur allemand". Comptes Rendus de l'Académie des Sciences, Série II. 317: 847–850.
Nosotti, S. & Pinna, G. (1993b). "New data on placodont skull anatomy". Paleontologia Lombarda. New Series. 2: 109–114.
Westphal, F. (1976). "The dermal armour of some Triassic placodont reptiles". In Bellairs, A. d’A. & Cox, C. B. (eds.). Morphology and Biology of Reptiles. London: Academic Press.
Zanon, R. T. (1989). "Paraplacodus and the diapsid origin of Placodontia". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 9: 47A.
doi:
10.1080/02724634.1989.10011786.