Doratodon: Difference between revisions

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overall expansion, detailed description of the jaws and teeth, further detail on thie history and referred/tentative specimen from Italy and Spain, adapting the taxobox to properly reflect the confirmed temporal range, phylogenies, paleobiology in a more meaningful way than just listing indet. groups, biogeography expansion, removed stub tag
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{{Short description|Extinct genus of reptiles}}
{{Short description|Extinct genus of reptiles}}
{{Automatic Taxobox
{{Automatic Taxobox
| fossil_range = [[Late Cretaceous]], <br>~{{fossilrange|85|68}}
| fossil_range = [[Late Cretaceous]], <br>~{{fossilrange|earliest=Coniacian|Santonian|Campanian|latest=Maastrichtian}} <small>Notosuchian teeth from Coniacian Italy and Maastrichtian Romania are sometimes referred to ''Doratodon''</small>
| image = Doratodon carcharidens mandible.png
| image = Doratodon carcharidens mandible.png
| image_caption = Holotype mandible of ''D. carcharidens'' (specimen PIUW 2349/57)
| image_caption = Holotype mandible of ''D. carcharidens'' (specimen PIUW 2349/57)
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* ''Diratodon'' <small>[[Friedrich von Huene|von Huene]], 1909 (''sic'')</small>
* ''Diratodon'' <small>[[Friedrich von Huene|von Huene]], 1909 (''sic'')</small>
* ''Dorathodon'' <small>[[Peter Wellnhofer|Wellnhofer]], 1980 (''sic'')</small>
* ''Dorathodon'' <small>[[Peter Wellnhofer|Wellnhofer]], 1980 (''sic'')</small>
* ''Dorathodon carcharidens'' <small>Wellnhofer, 1980 (''sic'')</small>
* ''[[Rhadinosaurus|Rhadinosaurus alcimus]]''? <small>Seeley, 1881</small>
* ''[[Rhadinosaurus|Rhadinosaurus alcimus]]''? <small>Seeley, 1881</small>
}}
}}


'''''Doratodon''''' is an [[extinct]] [[genus]] of [[Late Cretaceous]] ziphodont [[crocodylomorph]] that was once believed to be a [[dinosaur]],<ref name=Seeley1881 /><ref name=Buscalioni2005>Company, J., Suberbiola, X.P., Ruiz-Omeñaca, J.I. & Buscalioni, A.D. (2005). A new species of ''Doratodon'' (Crocodyliformes: Ziphosuchia) from the Late Cretaceous of Spain. ''Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology'' '''25'''(2): 343–353</ref> that could be a [[sebecosuchia]]n [[mesoeucrocodylia]]n.<ref name=Rabi15 /> Two species of ''Doratodon'' are known to science: ''D. carcharidens'' from [[Austria]] ([[Grünbach Formation]]) and [[Hungary]] ([[Csehbánya Formation]]), the [[type species]]; and ''D. ibericus'' from [[Spain]] ([[Sierra Perenchiza Formation]]).<ref name=Buscalioni2005 /><ref name=fossilworks/>
'''''Doratodon''''' is an [[extinct]] [[genus]] of [[Late Cretaceous]] [[crocodylomorph]] that may have been a member of the [[Sebecosuchia]]. ''Doratodon'' was a relatively small animal with ziphodont teeth, meaning the teeth had flattened sides and serrated edges. Two species of ''Doratodon'' are known to science: ''D. carcharidens'' from [[Austria]] ([[Grünbach Formation]]) and [[Hungary]] ([[Csehbánya Formation]]), the [[type species]]; and ''D. ibericus'' from [[Spain]] ([[Sierra Perenchiza Formation]]). Teeth similar to those of ''Doratodon'' are also known from [[Italy]] and [[Romania]], though they cannot be confidently assigned to this genus.


Due to its relationship with crocodylomorphs native to [[Gondwana]], ''Doratodon'' is considered to be an important indicator for the repeated faunal interchange between Europe and Africa during the Cretaceous. It was a cosmopolitan genus widespread throughout the islands that formed Europe during its time.
The [[holotype]] of ''D. carcharidens'' consists of a denture and a mandible.<ref name=Zoltan2015>{{cite journal |last1=Csiki-Sava |first1=Zoltan |last2=Buffetaut |first2=Eric |last3=Ősi |first3=Attila |last4=Pereda-Suberbiola |first4=Xabier |last5=Brusatte |first5=Stephen L. |title=Island life in the Cretaceous – faunal composition, biogeography, evolution, and extinction of land-living vertebrates on the Late Cretaceous European archipelago |journal=ZooKeys |date=2015 |volume=469 |pages=1–161 |doi=10.3897/zookeys.469.8439}}</ref> Other specimens include a maxilla fragment, a parietal and teeth. The holotype, and only known specimen of ''D. ibericus'', consists of an incomplete left mandible with dentation.


==History==
==History and naming==
The first remains of ''Doratodon'' were discovered by [[geologist]] [[Eduard Suess]] in a [[coal mine]] in [[Winzendorf-Muthmannsdorf|Muthmannsdorf]] near [[Wiener Neustadt]], [[Austria]].<ref name=Seeley1881>{{cite journal |last1=Seeley |first1=H. G. |author1-link=Harry Govier Seeley |title=The Reptile Fauna of the Gosau Formation preserved in the Geological Museum of the University of Vienna |journal=Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society |date=1881 |volume=37 |issue=1–4 |pages=620–706 |doi=10.1144/GSL.JGS.1881.037.01-04.49}}</ref> Excavations at the site, now known as the [[Grünbach Formation]] (a part of the more extensive [[Gosau Group]]), yielded a variety of crocodylomorph remains including the holotype mandible PIUW 2349/57 and various other cranial remains. The mandible was described by [[Emanuel Bunzel]] as ''[[Crocodilus]] carcharidens'' in 1871 while referring the additional material only to ''Crocodilus'' on a genus level.<ref name=Bunzel1871>{{cite journal |last=Bunzel |first=Emanuel |year=1871 |title=Die Reptilfauna der Gosauformation in der Neuen Welt bei Wiener-Neustadt |journal=Abhandlungen der Kaiserlich-königlichen Geologischen Reichsanstalt |volume=5 |pages=1–18 |url=http://www.landesmuseum.at/pdf_frei_remote/AbhGeolBA_5_0001-0018.pdf |access-date=11 September 2013|language=de}}</ref> [[Harry Govier Seeley]] however cast doubt over Bunzel's designation in 1881, proposing that the material instead belonged to a dinosaur he called ''Doratodon'', coining the genus name. Although the name was kept, later researchers including [[Franz Nopcsa]] and [[Charles Craig Mook]] would return to Bunzel's classification of the material as a type of crocodyliform. In 1979 the Austrian crocodyliform material was reviewed by French paleontologist [[Éric Buffetaut]], who concluded that among the additional material, a [[maxilla]], [[parietal bone]] and some isolated teeth could all be assigned to ''Doratodon''. However some of the reasoning is not elaborated on by Buffetaut.<ref name=Rabi15/> Between its discovery and today, ''Doratodon'' has changed classification several times, at times considered to be a dinosaur, a [[goniopholidae|goniopholid]] neosuchian, a [[Hsisosuchidae|hsisosuchid]] and recently most often as a [[Sebecosuchia|sebecosuchian]]. Additional material in the form of an incomplete lower jaw was later discovered in the [[Sierra Perenchiza Formation]] of [[Valencia]], [[Spain]]. The specimen, MGUV 3201, displays the same ziphodont dentition as the [[type species]] and was named as a new species of ''Doratodon'', ''D. ibericus'', by Company ''et al.'' in 2005.<ref name=C05>{{Cite journal|last1=Company|first1=J.|last2=Suberbiola|first2= X.P.|last3=Ruiz-Omeñaca|first3=J.I.|last4=Buscalioni|first4=A.D.|year=2005|title=A new species of ''Doratodon'' (Crocodyliformes: Ziphosuchia) from the Late Cretaceous of Spain|url=https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/46959520/A_new_species_of_Doratodon_Crocodylifor20160702-14388-eiumrb-libre.pdf?1467479158=&response-content-disposition=inline%3B+filename%3DA_new_species_of_Doratodon_Crocodyliform.pdf&Expires=1680175665&Signature=Vm13Izy2d9QpE27J6NtZe-duhs4BbQdrmRPZ7TqrEi7fJVLi02YzbaNtxe7sRrmqmA7aaM-o~tEzMAbS8mc629ec94sZuaeoXhARuZ-ffVrRvdzlQ3ZN35335SXyscxA5pTaTX21o0wG7WASz7AgHcMOFq59kKLVeLCVLkxscnyP6YTkouQu6icO~f1S9pAzQgo8cajitE8Yziv025spu6vLjeoE3Q61gUIRy7yrzOi9lWniCXs63XDH2P05NEibOt842Lm0bJo59Uyhd2aLxuhzW5UHh2GZSYnXWzU2qu0yxoAFNe8lzuKDVNfXlmT1taZo5aUWJMkLciGx3jnWaA__&Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA|journal=Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology|volume=25|issue=2|pages=343–353|doi=10.1671/0272-4634(2005)025[0343:ANSODC]2.0.CO;2}}</ref> In 2015 Márton Rabi and Nóra Sebők report the discovery of various isolated ''Doratodon'' remains from the [[Santonian]] [[Csehbánya Formation]] of [[Hungary]], making these the oldest confirmed remains of this taxon currently known. The Hungarian material consists of a [[premaxilla]], a maxilla, isolated teeth and two fragments of the lower jaw.<ref name=Rabi15>{{cite journal|last1=Rabi |first1=M. |last2=Sebők |first2=N. |title=A revised Eurogondwana model: Late Cretaceous notosuchian crocodyliforms and other vertebrate taxa suggest the retention of episodic faunal links between Europe and Gondwana during most of the Cretaceous |url=https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/36755781/Rabi_and_Sebok_in_press_Doratodon_Eurogondwana_model-libre.pdf?1424792580=&response-content-disposition=inline%3B+filename%3DA_revised_Eurogondwana_model_Late_Cretac.pdf&Expires=1680175615&Signature=J-u7tQp-sukwmA7xlSYQFwelViZgu0NQWrHOHw6fS0mmu7srsS43t0VZTiVtI1mwZZzGjlQNvbFp3sg-p0KGwbl3LElqQzbYsfkJyFgjoICWhvBb~opbNEnnUJpHAH1kTm99b7Hieo-pQ0YnvZg12BjE-84qtmrdYEvJe0Fnt1wyQsuZr8wDVavP71ZAOD4tP~-yG~~TgYOqhnoOS7c8N2ajFCbUqAJqCCn9P8gQAJ5losJPdsJ1wI6eLAkrnI7Y5BaRn~3VlFiaSmq0NTtlszRn27Y1juURbJykL8cLUL6yRKVO7qLfFCoM5tDczNPqkn-EFtrCWanPrrKDMWv6Ug__&Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA|date=2015 |journal=[[Gondwana Research]] |volume=28 |issue=3 |pages=1197–1211 |doi=10.1016/j.gr.2014.09.015 |bibcode=2015GondR..28.1197R }}</ref> Less complete remains sometimes assigned to ''Doratodon'' are known from [[Romania]]'s [[Hateg Island]]<ref name=M06/><ref name=V08>{{Cite journal|last1=Vasile|first1=S.|year=2008|title=A new microvertebrate site from the Upper Cretaceous (Maastrichtian) deposits of the Haţeg Basin|url=https://biblioteca-digitala.ro/reviste/Sargetia-Naturae/21-Sargetia_Acta-Musei-Devensis_Series-Scientia-Naturae-XXI-2008_006.pdf|journal=Sargetia|volume=21|pages=5-15}}</ref><ref name=M10/><ref name=V19/> and [[Italy]]'s Polazzo fossil site, dating to the [[Maastrichtian]] and [[Coniacian]]-Santonian respectively. However in both instances these remains consist of isolated teeth only, with the referral to ''Doratodon'' being solely based on its status as the only named truly ziphodont crocodyliform of Cretaceous Europe. Due to this, Dalla Vecchia and Andrea Cau argue that such isolated remains can only be referred to indetermined Notosuchians.<ref name=V11>{{Cite journal|last1=Dalla Vecchia|first1=F.M.|last2=Cau|first2=C.|year=2011|title=The first record of a notosuchian crocodyliform from Italy.|url=https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/49855373/The_first_record_of_a_nothosuchian_croco20161025-6362-dwjwuo-libre.pdf?1477396544=&response-content-disposition=inline%3B+filename%3DThe_first_record_of_a_nothosuchian_croco.pdf&Expires=1680175019&Signature=I-ZgyTMFSdpmfOTbOGGjgqz9T23~zMIv5K1KJwO6G3KZjC8-e0g8b-r9quSfPbafIXdWdWYqphJEkg6XyHYkoVwUjXBjPMC~U7KuKkas4fZf7URADllOqDcFTciMA09hlzPtmzPcOvmLPyFvDdIPB3LHZ15HtLjRVPf97QT~NKGHP0x6LZkgSBShRabWsnJgtkPCnrPLYYOHP181IOwLAFLbHSA8U6vhRoBeErL2PV4NmC97tmzD9JXCOIhr61X35ju8tfMbCZH02j-sObYw2SU38~JwOXAZWrkR~1pQinYO0J4n8Y26dWNQnBcRLMZBzi4-o5TfP8MqKDFjtk0ckg__&Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA|journal=Rivista Italiana di Paleontologia e Stratigrafia|volume=117|issue=2|pages=309-321}}</ref><ref name=Zoltan2015>{{cite journal |last1=Csiki-Sava |first1=Zoltan |last2=Buffetaut |first2=Eric |last3=Ősi |first3=Attila |last4=Pereda-Suberbiola |first4=Xabier |last5=Brusatte |first5=Stephen L. |title=Island life in the Cretaceous – faunal composition, biogeography, evolution, and extinction of land-living vertebrates on the Late Cretaceous European archipelago |journal=ZooKeys |date=2015 |volume=469 |pages=1–161 |doi=10.3897/zookeys.469.8439}}</ref>
In 1859, geologist [[Eduard Suess]] at the ''Gute Hoffnung'' coal mine at [[Muthmannsdorf]] near [[Wiener Neustadt]] in Austria, discovered the holotype, PIUW 2349/57. With the help of mine intendant Pawlowitsch, they attempted to find the source of the fossil material. The search proved fruitless at first but ultimately a thin marl layer was discovered, intersected by an obliquely sloping mine shaft, which contained an abundant number of various [[archosaur]] fossils. These were subsequently excavated by Suess and [[Ferdinand Stoliczka]].<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Bunzel |first1=Emmanuel |title=Notice of a fragment of a reptilian skull from the Upper Cretaceous of Grünbach |journal=Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society |date=1870 |volume=26 |issue=1/2 |pages=394–394 |doi=10.1144/GSL.JGS.1870.026.01-02.35}}</ref><ref name=Bunzel1871 /> The marl was a [[fresh water]] deposit, now considered part of the [[Grünbach Formation]].<ref name=Zoltan2015 />


''D. carcharidens'' was named for its triangular, serrated teeth which resemble those of sharks ("carcharias" in [[Ancient Greek]]) while the species name of ''D. ibericus'' is derived from the [[Iberian peninsula]].<ref name=C05/>
[[Emanuel Bunzel]] named the type specimen as ''[[Crocodilus]] carcharidens'' in 1871.<ref name=Bunzel1871>{{cite journal |last=Bunzel |first=Emanuel |year=1871 |title=Die Reptilfauna der Gosauformation in der Neuen Welt bei Wiener-Neustadt |journal=Abhandlungen der Kaiserlich-königlichen Geologischen Reichsanstalt |volume=5 |pages=1–18 |url=http://www.landesmuseum.at/pdf_frei_remote/AbhGeolBA_5_0001-0018.pdf |access-date=11 September 2013|language=de}}</ref> He believed it to belong to a dinosaur.<ref name=Bunzel1871 /> It was renamed as the new species ''Doratodon carcharidens'' in 1881 by [[Harry Govier Seeley]].<ref name=Seeley1881>{{cite journal |last1=Seeley |first1=H. G. |author1-link=Harry Govier Seeley |title=The Reptile Fauna of the Gosau Formation preserved in the Geological Museum of the University of Vienna |journal=Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society |date=1881 |volume=37 |issue=1–4 |pages=620–706 |doi=10.1144/GSL.JGS.1881.037.01-04.49}}</ref> The second species, ''D. ibericus'', was named by Company ''et al.'' in 2005.<ref name=Buscalioni2005 /> ''Doratodon'' was reassessed by Zoltan ''et al.'' (2015) and Rabi & Sebok (2015) as a possible sebecosuchian mesoeucrocodylian.<ref name=Zoltan2015 /><ref name=Rabi15 />


==Description==
==Description==
''Doratodon'' was a small-bodied ziphosuchian with a narrow but deep skull, with much of that depth being formed by the [[maxillae]]. Among its defining features is the presence of an [[antorbital fenestra]] between the [[nares]] and the [[eye sockets]].<ref name=C05/> The premaxilla also shows that the snout was rather tall, as expected from a sebecosuchian, and the nares were located towards the rostrum's tip, positioned in a way that causes them to open primarily dorsolaterally (upward and to the sides) and slightly towards the front. At least four teeth were present in the premaxilla of ''Doratodon'', the first facing somewhat forward and separated from the following three by a [[diastema]], a brief toothless area. The largest of the premaxillary teeth appears to be the 4th. The premaxillary toothrow is not entirely straight and shows a gentle curvature. Based on known remains the maxillary toothrow is thought to have been straight, without the undulating curves seen in many modern crocodiles. However, since most maxillary fossils are believed to be located further towards the back of the skull, it is possible that the front, closer to the premaxilla, could have had more defined curves.<ref name=Rabi15/>
''Doratodon'' is represented by its diagnostic triangular, labiolingually flattened, and mesially and distally finely serrated teeth as well as some fragmentary dentaries.<ref name=Zoltan2015 />


Most of the material known from ''Doratodon'' represents the lower jaw. When viewing this part of the skull of ''D. ibericus'' from the side, two clearly defined waves can be seen, the first more abrupt raise reaches its apex at the 4th dentary tooth while the second raise peaks with the 10th before more gently transitioning into the [[surangular bone]]. This wave-like toothrow is however less pronounced in ''D. carcharidens'' and limited to a single raise. The external opening of the [[mandibular fenestra]] is closed, which is also seen in ''[[Wanosuchus]]'' but not in other ziphosuchians.<ref name=C05/>
==Classification==

''Doratodon'' was initially identified as a [[theropod]] [[dinosaur]],<ref name=Seeley1881 /> but it was later placed within the [[Ziphosuchia]].<ref name=Buscalioni2005 /> Zoltan ''et al.'' (2015) and Rabi & Sebok (2015) placed ''Doratodon'' within [[Sebecosuchia]],<ref name=Zoltan2015 /><ref name=Rabi15 /> a [[clade]] within [[Ziphosuchia]].
[[File:Doratodon ibericus.png|thumb|250px|Holotype mandible of ''D. ibericus'' (specimen MGUV 3201)|left]]
Both sides of the lower jaw features pits on the inner side of the mandibular teeth that recieved the larger teeth of the upper jaw.<ref name=C05/><ref name=Rabi15/> Overall ''Doratodon'' only possessed a small number of teeth, 11 in ''D. ibericus'' and up to 13 in ''D. carcharidens''. However, both Buffetaut as well as Rabi and Sebök argue for a higher tooth count in ''D. carcharidens'', possibly up to 20 teeth on either side of the lower jaw.<ref name=Rabi15/> The two species of ''Doratodon'' can generally be differentiated by the size variation found among the teeth of the lower jaw. In the type species, ''D. carcharidens'', the teeth show very little variation in size, with the [[dental alveoli]] generally ranging between {{convert|3-5|mm|abbr=on}} in length with the 4th tooth being the largest (though not hypertrophied as in ''[[Baurusuchus]]''). The difference in tooth size in ''D. ibericus'' is more developed and noticable. In this species the 4th tooth of the lower jaw is also enlarged, with the subsequent teeth initially decreasing in size noticably before increasing again from the 8th tooth onward, culminating in the 10th dentary tooth, the largest of the lower jaw. While the Austrian fossil likely stems from an adult based on the heavily ornamented bone surface, it has been suggested that the curvature of the tooth row may vary between animals of different ages instead of representing a difference between species. Regardless, another way to tell the two species apart is by the number diastemas. In ''D. carcharidens'', only a single diastema is present, located between the 2nd and 3rd tooth of the lower jaw.<ref name=C05/><ref name=Rabi15/> ''D. ibericus'' on the other hand possesses an additional diastema right behind the 7th tooth.<ref name=C05/>

The teeth of ''Doratodon'' are ziphodont, which means they are compressed along their sides and lined by a serrated ridge created by a series of small [[denticles]], clearly differentiating their teeth from the smooth, conical teeth of modern crocodilians.<ref name=Bunzel1871/> The shape of the individual teeth, although consistently ziphodont, can be separated into 4 [[morphotype]]s with subtle differences. The first type is relatively weakly compressed, almost conical and slender with a noticable curve of the [[toothcrown|crown]]. The second morphotype, to which one of the largest teeth belongs to, is overall similar in shape to the first morphotype. It is however more strongly compressed, not as slender (twice as long as wide at the base) and with a less developed curvature. There are fossils assigned to these two morphotypes that show varying degrees of serrations, with some having reduced denticles towards the tip or along the front-edge of the tooth. This however may not be an inherent trait and could instead represent the teeth being worn down, as some instances still show the faint remains of the serration. The third tooth type takes on the form of an [[isosceles triangle]], curving barely and being even more compressed than the second morphotype. Some of these teeth are three times longer at their base than they are wide. The fourth and final morphotype is the most extreme in this regard, showing the greatest compression but also being the lowest of the toothrow. Based on the overall form of these teeth and the shape of the tooth sockets, it is thought that they transition into one another along the toothrow, with the more conical teeth at the front and the most compressed teeth being placed at the back of the jaw.<ref name=Rabi15/>

While the absence of postcranial remains makes it difficult to estimate the size of ''Doratodon'', it is thought to have been a rather small animal. Between the two species, ''D. ibericus'' appears to have been larger, with the dentary bone being estimated to have reached a length of up to {{convert|105|mm|abbr=on}} if complete. This is notably larger than the dentary of ''D. carcharidens'', which meassures only {{convert|72|mm|abbr=on}}. Overall, the Spanish species also appears to have been proportionally more robust.<ref name=C05/>

==Phylogeny==
Besides Seeley, who considered ''Doratodon'' a type of dinosaur, most researchers agree that the animal represents a type of [[crocodyliform]].<ref name=Bunzel1871/> Nopcsa was the first to draw parallels between ''Doratodon'' and [[Notosuchia|notosuchians]], suggesting that it might have had affinities with ''[[Notosuchus]]''. This interpretation was mostly dismissed during the early to mid 20th century in favor of Mook's suggestion that it was a [[Goniopholidae|goniopholid]], a type of neosuchian that more closely resembles modern crocodiles. In 1968 similarities to notosuchians were once again recognized, this time by [[Othmar Kühn]] who noted that the teeth resembled those of [[Sebecosuchia|sebecosuchians]]. Yet another hypothesis was suggested by Éric Buffetaut, who considered ''Doratodon'' to be related to the Asian ''[[Hsisosuchus]]'' in 1979, this hypothesis was however refuted by Wu ''et al.'' (1994). Phylogenetic analysis conducted following the discovery of ''Doratodon ibericus'' confirmed the relationship between the genus and sebecosuchians. Company ''et al.'' (2005) for instance found ''Doratodon'' as the sistertaxon to Sebecosuchia as shown below.<ref name=C05/>

{{clade| style=font-size:85%;line-height:85%
|label1=[[Ziphosuchia]]
|1={{clade
|1=''[[Notosuchus]]''
|2={{clade
|1=''[[Libycosuchus]]''
|2={{clade
|1='''''Doratodon'''''
|label2=Sebecosuchia
|2={{clade
|1=''[[Baurusuchus]]''
|2=''[[Iberosuchus]]''
|3=''[[Bergisuchus]]''
|label4=Sebecidae
|4={{clade
|1=''[[Sebecus]]''
|2={{clade
|1=Itaborai Crocodyliform
|2=''[[Bretesuchus]]''
}}}}}}}}}}}}}}

Increased understanding of Notosuchian diversity only served to solidify ''Doratodon'''s position in the group. Using both the holotype dentary and the Hungarian material, Rabi and Sebök recovered ''Doratodon'' as a basal member within Sebecosuchia itself, rather than a sister taxon to the group. While this tree is only poorly resolved, this is not the fault of ''Doratodon'' alone, as other wildcard taxa also add to the imprecise results. Regardless, this result is generally in line with what was previously recovered by Company ''et al.'' and marks a clear shift in classification between pre- and post-[[cladistics|cladistic]] [[systematics]]. Still, Rabi and Sebök also consider the idea that ''Doratodon'' may have been more closely related to members of the [[Peirosauridae]] given the absence of sebecids in Cretaceous Africa, or to other crocodyliforms like the [[Planocraniidae]] given their geographic range and ziphodont dentition. The phylogenetic tree recovered by this study is shown below.<ref name=Rabi15/>

{{clade| style=font-size:85%;line-height:85%
|1={{clade
|1={{clade
|1=[[Uruguaysuchidae]]
|2={{clade
|1=[[Peirosauridae]]
|2=''[[Kaprosuchus]]''
}}}}
|2={{clade
|1=[[Notosuchia|advanced notosuchians]]
|2={{clade
|1=''[[Chimaerasuchus]]''
|2={{clade
|1=''[[Comahuesuchus]]''
|label2=Sebecosuchia
|2={{clade
|1='''''Doratodon carcharidens'''''
|2=''[[Pabwehshi]]''
|3=''[[Lorosuchus]]''
|4={{clade
|1=''[[Iberosuchus]]''
|2=''[[Bergisuchus]]''
}}
|5=''[[Sebecus icaeorhinus]]''
|6={{clade
|1=''[[Ayllusuchus]]''
|2=''[[Bretesuchus]]''
}}
|7=[[Baurusuchidae]]
}}}}}}}}}}}}


==Palaeobiology==
==Palaeobiology==
[[File:Campanian-Maastrichtian Spanish representative fauna.jpg|thumb|left|Fossils of various animals that coexisted with ''Doratodon'']]
===Palaeoecology===
===Palaeoecology===
''Doratodon'' is a [[cosmopolitan (biology)|cosmopolitan]] genus known from various European countries, which at the time would have been split into a series of islands and [[archipelagos]] separated by the [[Tethys Sea]]. ''Doratodon carcharidens'' has been found in the Campanian Grünbach Formation of Austria<ref name=Bunzel1871/> and the Santonian Csehbánya Formation of Hungary.<ref name=Rabi15/> ''Doratodon ibericus'' has only been found in the Sierra Perenchiza Formation in Spain, also dating to the Campanian.<ref name=Company12>{{Cite journal|last1=Company|first1=Julio|last2=Szentesi|first2=Zoltán|date=2012|title=Amphibians from the Late Cretaceous Sierra Perenchiza Formation of the Chera Basin, Valencia Province, Spain|url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cretres.2012.04.003|journal=Cretaceous Research|volume=37|pages=240–245|doi=10.1016/j.cretres.2012.04.003 }}</ref><ref name=C05/> Its presence in Italy and on Romanias Hateg Island during the Coniacian to Maastrichtian is also possible, but not certain.<ref name=M06/><ref name=V11/><ref name=Zoltan2015/>
[[File:Doratodon ibericus.png|thumb|250px|Holotype mandible of ''D. ibericus'' (specimen MGUV 3201)]]
''Doratodon'' is known from at least three formations in [[Europe]]: the [[Grünbach Formation]], the [[Csehbánya Formation]] and the [[Sierra Perenchiza Formation]].


It has been suggested that ''Doratodon'', like other ziphodont Notosuchians, was a terrestrial animal, which makes it an outlier in the Cretaceous crocodyliform fauna of Europe which is otherwise primarily composed of [[Neosuchia|neosuchians]], which favor more aquatic lifestyles.<ref name=C05/> ''Doratodon'' was a predatory animal, actively hunting the animals of its habitat, judging from the triangular, serrated teeth.<ref name=M06/><ref name=M10/>
In the [[Grünbach Formation]], ''Doratodon'' would have coexisted with:<ref name=Zoltan2015 /> three species of indeterminate [[pterosaurs]] (one is ''[[Ornithocheirus buenzeli]]''), an unnamed [[eusuchia]]n, an unnamed [[choristodera|choristodere]], two indeterminate [[turtle]] species, an indeterminate [[tetanurae|tetanuran]] theropod, the [[rhabdodontidae|rhabdodontid]] ''[[Mochlodon]]'' and the [[nodosauridae|nodosaurids]] ''[[Rhadinosaurus]]'' and ''[[Struthiosaurus]]''.


The localities that preserve ''Doratodon'' are generally dominated by dinosaurs as the primary terrestrial fauna, especially [[rhabdodontids]] and the ankylosaur ''[[Struthiosaurus]]''. Crocodylomorphs are also common, but primarilly in the form of Neosuchians. For instance, ''[[Acynodon]]''<ref name=M06/> was found to inhabit Hateg and Spain while ''[[Iharkutosuchus]]'' was found in Hungary. Iberia was home to ''[[Musturzabalsuchus]]'', ''[[Ischyrochampsa]]'' and ''[[Arenysuchus]]''.<ref name=Zoltan2015/> ''[[Allodaposuchus]]'' was another example of a cosmopolitan crocodyliform with a wide distribution across the European archipelago, being found in Romania, Hungary, Spain and various countries that have not yet yielded ''Doratodon'' fossils.<ref name=V19/><ref name=Zoltan2015/><ref name=M06>{{Cite journal|last1=Martin|first1=J.E.|last2=Csiki|first2=Z.|last3=Grigorescu|first3=D.|last4=Buffetaut|first4=E.|year=2006|title=Late Cretaceous crocodilian diversity in Haţeg Basin, Romania.|url=http://real.mtak.hu/156250/1/Hantkeniana_5_05.pdf|journal=Hantkeniana|volume=5|pages= 31-37}}</ref> Both Hateg and the Csehbánya Formation additionally preserve remains of crocodylomorphs with heterodont<ref name=M06/> and pseudo-ziphodont teeth distinct from ''Doratodon'' as well as the remains of the small terrestrial [[Atoposauridae|atoposaurids]].<ref name=Zoltan2015/><ref name=M10>{{Cite journal|last1=Martin|first1=J.E.|last2= Rabi|first2=M.|last3=Csiki|first3=Z.|year=2010|title=Survival of Theriosuchus (Mesoeucrocodylia: Atoposauridae) in a Late Cretaceous archipelago: a new species from the Maastrichtian of Romania.|url=https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/32272826/Martin_et_al_2010_-_survival_of_Theriosuchus_in_Maastr_Romania-libre.pdf?1391094265=&response-content-disposition=inline%3B+filename%3DSurvival_of_Theriosuchus_Mesoeucrocodyli.pdf&Expires=1680179787&Signature=BwSlAN-PzZ7eDx2y-5gWfT1iSK6PapjAWCYqJpYcYl55TqHZ9dDo5NNMFS0SVrgo7S0ZB4ejONZ2NUNI9TayrRtz~AiXowrTS6ZaUg5245ELwgaHWonjAADTYQkjFek2LuDDNe8MWzsDHr-N82cbGWPit6hPhcdCRut5vfQeKLs9yjjbmxjiRRsfizN1zc2KyDlf5Y7Z8-B~WiSA2C2wn85bIBJ08lSYy3rQ28~Fc3VuUZytx5lRkyt-2aADcTuTxHU5IOdMmNJ3wYTp9c8K8m4ReiCYb3Q~KCkoCQ7-GDWDuG3A9nnFVKi2vvyoAxvlMrr3aI7zf9bI7eV8UP79ZA__&Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA|journal=Naturwissenschaften|volume=97|pages=845-854| doi=10.1007/s00114-010-0702-y}}</ref><ref name=V19>{{Cite journal|last1=Vasile|first1=S.|last2=Csiki-Sava|first2=Z.|last3=Voicu|first3=S.M.|year=2019|title=New discoveries from the latest cretaceous „Pui Swamp” vertebrate fossil locality (Haţeg Basin, Hunedoara County)|url=https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/66033468/Vasile_et_al._2019_New_discoveries_from_Pui_Swamp_site_Latest_Cretaceous_Romania-libre.pdf?1615913016=&response-content-disposition=inline%3B+filename%3DNew_discoveries_from_the_latest_Cretaceo.pdf&Expires=1680180007&Signature=KW9BsDfczGOejamFWVZCUSZsCrcCwUJ40YtpTIIiLLd116vgh7sybdHqX8GD7bPogioDVtwA8flWgy~I1vtRoCfw0DXZMpbMolvxU1WM-lGomyqe3JaI82i6XhwfXPODBl7fcGpYSFfBAF6w5g6JElbSmLOgLr6nHZln6JH4jOZayOEXnqbkytH-RPY296~oLbyawqiKobUx~Ymd9Af6x3wFUjydF5CJeuYYnOeEpv-d686aSVyphcf6U-C0OljVyBuoOh0hhtN7s0AJv9W7nNlIYJ-4CaUzYlfsM7L4moTynLItdcteqno0-jp1O3fOanN~KLJvT8RJ0NnkvUUsLg__&Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA|journal=Argesis. Studii şi comunicări. Ştiinţele Naturii|volume=27|pages=91-104}}</ref>
In the [[Csehbánya Formation]], ''Doratodon'' would have coexisted with:<ref name=Zoltan2015 /> multiple species of [[squamata|squamates]], such as the [[mosasaur]] ''[[Pannoniasaurus]]'' and the [[scincomorpha|scincomorph]] ''[[Chromatogenys]]'', three species of [[crocodyliformes]] (''[[cf.]]'' ''[[Allodaposuchus]]'', ''[[Iharkutosuchus]]'' and ''cf.'' ''[[Theriosuchus]]''), three species of [[turtle]]s (''[[Foxemys]]'', ''[[Kallokibotion]]'' and [[Dortokidae]] indet.), the pterosaurs ''[[Bakonydraco]]'', [[Azhdarchidae]] indet. and [[Pterodactyloidea]] indet., and the dinosaurs ''[[Ajkaceratops]]'', ''[[Bauxitornis]]'', ''[[Hungarosaurus]]'', ''[[Mochlodon]]'', ''[[Pneumatoraptor]]'', ''[[Struthiosaurus]]'', [[Paraves]] indet., [[Abelisauridae]] indet., [[Tetanurae]] indet. and an indeterminate [[sauropod]].

In the [[Sierra Perenchiza Formation]], ''Doratodon'' would have coexisted with:<ref name=Buscalioni2005 /><ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Company|first1=Julio|last2=Szentesi|first2=Zoltán|date=2012|title=Amphibians from the Late Cretaceous Sierra Perenchiza Formation of the Chera Basin, Valencia Province, Spain|url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cretres.2012.04.003|journal=Cretaceous Research|volume=37|pages=240–245|doi=10.1016/j.cretres.2012.04.003 }}</ref> the [[crocodyliformes]] ''[[Acynodon]]'' and ''[[Musturzabalsuchus]]'', indeterminate [[turtle]]s, an indeterminate [[lissamphibia]]n, two indeterminate [[Anura (frog)|frog]] species (one species likely part of the [[Discoglossidae]]), indeterminate [[pterosaur]]s an indeterminate [[Albanerpetontidae|albanerpetontid]] and several indeterminate [[dinosaurs]].


=== Paleobiogeography ===
=== Paleobiogeography ===
[[File:Santonian-Maastrichtian European fossil deposits.jpg|thumb|During the Late Cretaceous Europe was largely spit into a series of islands.]]
''[[Bergisuchus]]'' and ''[[Iberosuchus]]'' do not appear to be closely related to the [[Cretaceous]] sebecosuchian ''Doratodon'', which was found across Europe during the [[Late Cretaceous]]. This appears to indicate that ''Bergisuchus'' and other European sebecosuchians did not descend from Cretaceous European sebecosuchians like ''Doratodon'', but was instead part of a separate invasion of sebecosuchians into Europe during the [[Palaeogene]] from South America.<ref name=Rabi15>{{cite journal|last1=Rabi |first1=M. |last2=Sebők |first2=N. |title=A revised Eurogondwana model: Late Cretaceous notosuchian crocodyliforms and other vertebrate taxa suggest the retention of episodic faunal links between Europe and Gondwana during most of the Cretaceous |date=2015 |journal=[[Gondwana Research]] |volume=28 |issue=3 |pages=1197–1211 |doi=10.1016/j.gr.2014.09.015 |bibcode=2015GondR..28.1197R }}</ref>
The classification of ''Doratodon'' as a sebecosuchian or at the very least some type of crocodyliform with [[Gondwana]]n relations is an important aspect in determining the [[paleobiogeography]] of Cretaceous Europe and Africa. Notosuchians are a traditionally Gondwanan group, primarily found in the Cretaceous of South America and Africa. While some groups such as peirosaurids, [[Uruguaysuchidae|uruguaysuchids]] and [[Mahajangasuchidae|mahajangasuchids]] were found around the [[Mediterranean]], sebecosuchians are not known from this region until the onset of the [[Cenozoic]], when ''[[Eremosuchus]]'' lived in [[Algeria]] while ''[[Bergisuchus]]'' and ''[[Iberosuchus]]'' appeared in Europe. This already suggests that sebecosuchians must have been much more widespread than currently known, especially given the fact that phylogenetic analysis failed to find any close relationship between ''Doratodon'' and the more recent European sebecids.<ref name=C05/> Two major models have been proposed to explain the fauna native to the European archipelago and northern Africa during this time. According to the Eurogondwana model, Europe remained connected to Gondwana in some capacity until the [[Hauterivian]], after the fauna of Asia and America had already been isolated from the other continents. The model further proposes that what followed was a period of isolation for Europe until making contact with Asiamerica during the [[Barremian]] to Campanian, allowing for a faunal interchange between the two regions. The Antlantogea model meanwhile suggests that during the Campanian to Maastrichtian Europe once again connected to Africa, by that point split from the rest of Gondwana, allowing for fauna to move between the continents until the [[Eocene]].<ref name=Rabi15/>

The discovery of ''Doratodon'' remains from the Santonian of Hungary indicates that the connection proposed by the Atlantogea model must have begun at the latest during this time period, pushing the onset of the faunal interchange back by several million years. Further support for this is offered by other vertebrate remains at the locality, which includes Gondwanan groups like [[Bothremydidae|bothremydid turtles]] and [[Abelisauridae|abelisaurs]]. Discoveries from the Coniacian of Italy and the [[Cenomanian]] of [[France]] may push the faunal interchange back even further, as does the presence of [[Carcharodontosauridae|carcharodontosaurs]], [[spinosaurs]] and [[Pholidosauridae|pholidosaurs]] from the [[Barremian]] to [[Aptian]] on both continents. In general, this clashes with the idea that Africa and Europe became fully isolated from one another after the Hautverian.<ref name=Rabi15/>

Since truly ziphodont crocodyliforms are not known from Europe prior to the appearance of ''Doratodon'', Rabi and Sebök suggest that it must have been a true Late Cretaceous immigrant, rather than the result of a lineage that had arrived in the European archipelago during the Early Cretaceous.<ref name=Rabi15/><ref name=Zoltan2015/> Likewise, later European sebecids such as ''Bergisuchus'' and ''Iberosuchus'' likely arrived through separate events during the [[Paleogene]], as they show no signs of being descendents of ''Doratodon'' and instead are considered to be much more derived members of Sebecosuchia.<ref name=Rabi15/>


==References==
==References==
{{reflist|30em|refs=
{{reflist}}
<ref name=fossilworks>{{cite web |url=http://www.fossilworks.org/cgi-bin/bridge.pl?a=taxonInfo&taxon_no=38378 |title=†''Doratodon'' Seeley 1881 |work=Paleobiology Database |publisher=Fossilworks |access-date=28 February 2023}}</ref>
}}


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{{Notosuchia|N.}}
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[[Category:Fossil taxa described in 1881]]
[[Category:Fossil taxa described in 1881]]
[[Category:Taxa named by Harry Seeley]]
[[Category:Taxa named by Harry Seeley]]


{{paleo-archosaur-stub}}

Revision as of 13:15, 30 March 2023

Doratodon
Temporal range: Late Cretaceous,
~Santonian–Campanian Notosuchian teeth from Coniacian Italy and Maastrichtian Romania are sometimes referred to Doratodon
Holotype mandible of D. carcharidens (specimen PIUW 2349/57)
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Clade: Archosauria
Clade: Pseudosuchia
Clade: Crocodylomorpha
Clade: Crocodyliformes
Clade: Notosuchia
Clade: Ziphosuchia
Genus: Doratodon
Seeley, 1881
Type species
Doratodon carcharidens
(Bunzel, 1871)
Other species
  • D. ibericus Company et al., 2005
Synonyms

Doratodon is an extinct genus of Late Cretaceous crocodylomorph that may have been a member of the Sebecosuchia. Doratodon was a relatively small animal with ziphodont teeth, meaning the teeth had flattened sides and serrated edges. Two species of Doratodon are known to science: D. carcharidens from Austria (Grünbach Formation) and Hungary (Csehbánya Formation), the type species; and D. ibericus from Spain (Sierra Perenchiza Formation). Teeth similar to those of Doratodon are also known from Italy and Romania, though they cannot be confidently assigned to this genus.

Due to its relationship with crocodylomorphs native to Gondwana, Doratodon is considered to be an important indicator for the repeated faunal interchange between Europe and Africa during the Cretaceous. It was a cosmopolitan genus widespread throughout the islands that formed Europe during its time.

History and naming

The first remains of Doratodon were discovered by geologist Eduard Suess in a coal mine in Muthmannsdorf near Wiener Neustadt, Austria.[1] Excavations at the site, now known as the Grünbach Formation (a part of the more extensive Gosau Group), yielded a variety of crocodylomorph remains including the holotype mandible PIUW 2349/57 and various other cranial remains. The mandible was described by Emanuel Bunzel as Crocodilus carcharidens in 1871 while referring the additional material only to Crocodilus on a genus level.[2] Harry Govier Seeley however cast doubt over Bunzel's designation in 1881, proposing that the material instead belonged to a dinosaur he called Doratodon, coining the genus name. Although the name was kept, later researchers including Franz Nopcsa and Charles Craig Mook would return to Bunzel's classification of the material as a type of crocodyliform. In 1979 the Austrian crocodyliform material was reviewed by French paleontologist Éric Buffetaut, who concluded that among the additional material, a maxilla, parietal bone and some isolated teeth could all be assigned to Doratodon. However some of the reasoning is not elaborated on by Buffetaut.[3] Between its discovery and today, Doratodon has changed classification several times, at times considered to be a dinosaur, a goniopholid neosuchian, a hsisosuchid and recently most often as a sebecosuchian. Additional material in the form of an incomplete lower jaw was later discovered in the Sierra Perenchiza Formation of Valencia, Spain. The specimen, MGUV 3201, displays the same ziphodont dentition as the type species and was named as a new species of Doratodon, D. ibericus, by Company et al. in 2005.[4] In 2015 Márton Rabi and Nóra Sebők report the discovery of various isolated Doratodon remains from the Santonian Csehbánya Formation of Hungary, making these the oldest confirmed remains of this taxon currently known. The Hungarian material consists of a premaxilla, a maxilla, isolated teeth and two fragments of the lower jaw.[3] Less complete remains sometimes assigned to Doratodon are known from Romania's Hateg Island[5][6][7][8] and Italy's Polazzo fossil site, dating to the Maastrichtian and Coniacian-Santonian respectively. However in both instances these remains consist of isolated teeth only, with the referral to Doratodon being solely based on its status as the only named truly ziphodont crocodyliform of Cretaceous Europe. Due to this, Dalla Vecchia and Andrea Cau argue that such isolated remains can only be referred to indetermined Notosuchians.[9][10]

D. carcharidens was named for its triangular, serrated teeth which resemble those of sharks ("carcharias" in Ancient Greek) while the species name of D. ibericus is derived from the Iberian peninsula.[4]

Description

Doratodon was a small-bodied ziphosuchian with a narrow but deep skull, with much of that depth being formed by the maxillae. Among its defining features is the presence of an antorbital fenestra between the nares and the eye sockets.[4] The premaxilla also shows that the snout was rather tall, as expected from a sebecosuchian, and the nares were located towards the rostrum's tip, positioned in a way that causes them to open primarily dorsolaterally (upward and to the sides) and slightly towards the front. At least four teeth were present in the premaxilla of Doratodon, the first facing somewhat forward and separated from the following three by a diastema, a brief toothless area. The largest of the premaxillary teeth appears to be the 4th. The premaxillary toothrow is not entirely straight and shows a gentle curvature. Based on known remains the maxillary toothrow is thought to have been straight, without the undulating curves seen in many modern crocodiles. However, since most maxillary fossils are believed to be located further towards the back of the skull, it is possible that the front, closer to the premaxilla, could have had more defined curves.[3]

Most of the material known from Doratodon represents the lower jaw. When viewing this part of the skull of D. ibericus from the side, two clearly defined waves can be seen, the first more abrupt raise reaches its apex at the 4th dentary tooth while the second raise peaks with the 10th before more gently transitioning into the surangular bone. This wave-like toothrow is however less pronounced in D. carcharidens and limited to a single raise. The external opening of the mandibular fenestra is closed, which is also seen in Wanosuchus but not in other ziphosuchians.[4]

Holotype mandible of D. ibericus (specimen MGUV 3201)

Both sides of the lower jaw features pits on the inner side of the mandibular teeth that recieved the larger teeth of the upper jaw.[4][3] Overall Doratodon only possessed a small number of teeth, 11 in D. ibericus and up to 13 in D. carcharidens. However, both Buffetaut as well as Rabi and Sebök argue for a higher tooth count in D. carcharidens, possibly up to 20 teeth on either side of the lower jaw.[3] The two species of Doratodon can generally be differentiated by the size variation found among the teeth of the lower jaw. In the type species, D. carcharidens, the teeth show very little variation in size, with the dental alveoli generally ranging between 3–5 mm (0.12–0.20 in) in length with the 4th tooth being the largest (though not hypertrophied as in Baurusuchus). The difference in tooth size in D. ibericus is more developed and noticable. In this species the 4th tooth of the lower jaw is also enlarged, with the subsequent teeth initially decreasing in size noticably before increasing again from the 8th tooth onward, culminating in the 10th dentary tooth, the largest of the lower jaw. While the Austrian fossil likely stems from an adult based on the heavily ornamented bone surface, it has been suggested that the curvature of the tooth row may vary between animals of different ages instead of representing a difference between species. Regardless, another way to tell the two species apart is by the number diastemas. In D. carcharidens, only a single diastema is present, located between the 2nd and 3rd tooth of the lower jaw.[4][3] D. ibericus on the other hand possesses an additional diastema right behind the 7th tooth.[4]

The teeth of Doratodon are ziphodont, which means they are compressed along their sides and lined by a serrated ridge created by a series of small denticles, clearly differentiating their teeth from the smooth, conical teeth of modern crocodilians.[2] The shape of the individual teeth, although consistently ziphodont, can be separated into 4 morphotypes with subtle differences. The first type is relatively weakly compressed, almost conical and slender with a noticable curve of the crown. The second morphotype, to which one of the largest teeth belongs to, is overall similar in shape to the first morphotype. It is however more strongly compressed, not as slender (twice as long as wide at the base) and with a less developed curvature. There are fossils assigned to these two morphotypes that show varying degrees of serrations, with some having reduced denticles towards the tip or along the front-edge of the tooth. This however may not be an inherent trait and could instead represent the teeth being worn down, as some instances still show the faint remains of the serration. The third tooth type takes on the form of an isosceles triangle, curving barely and being even more compressed than the second morphotype. Some of these teeth are three times longer at their base than they are wide. The fourth and final morphotype is the most extreme in this regard, showing the greatest compression but also being the lowest of the toothrow. Based on the overall form of these teeth and the shape of the tooth sockets, it is thought that they transition into one another along the toothrow, with the more conical teeth at the front and the most compressed teeth being placed at the back of the jaw.[3]

While the absence of postcranial remains makes it difficult to estimate the size of Doratodon, it is thought to have been a rather small animal. Between the two species, D. ibericus appears to have been larger, with the dentary bone being estimated to have reached a length of up to 105 mm (4.1 in) if complete. This is notably larger than the dentary of D. carcharidens, which meassures only 72 mm (2.8 in). Overall, the Spanish species also appears to have been proportionally more robust.[4]

Phylogeny

Besides Seeley, who considered Doratodon a type of dinosaur, most researchers agree that the animal represents a type of crocodyliform.[2] Nopcsa was the first to draw parallels between Doratodon and notosuchians, suggesting that it might have had affinities with Notosuchus. This interpretation was mostly dismissed during the early to mid 20th century in favor of Mook's suggestion that it was a goniopholid, a type of neosuchian that more closely resembles modern crocodiles. In 1968 similarities to notosuchians were once again recognized, this time by Othmar Kühn who noted that the teeth resembled those of sebecosuchians. Yet another hypothesis was suggested by Éric Buffetaut, who considered Doratodon to be related to the Asian Hsisosuchus in 1979, this hypothesis was however refuted by Wu et al. (1994). Phylogenetic analysis conducted following the discovery of Doratodon ibericus confirmed the relationship between the genus and sebecosuchians. Company et al. (2005) for instance found Doratodon as the sistertaxon to Sebecosuchia as shown below.[4]

Ziphosuchia

Notosuchus

Libycosuchus

Doratodon

Sebecosuchia

Baurusuchus

Iberosuchus

Bergisuchus

Sebecidae

Sebecus

Itaborai Crocodyliform

Bretesuchus

Increased understanding of Notosuchian diversity only served to solidify Doratodon's position in the group. Using both the holotype dentary and the Hungarian material, Rabi and Sebök recovered Doratodon as a basal member within Sebecosuchia itself, rather than a sister taxon to the group. While this tree is only poorly resolved, this is not the fault of Doratodon alone, as other wildcard taxa also add to the imprecise results. Regardless, this result is generally in line with what was previously recovered by Company et al. and marks a clear shift in classification between pre- and post-cladistic systematics. Still, Rabi and Sebök also consider the idea that Doratodon may have been more closely related to members of the Peirosauridae given the absence of sebecids in Cretaceous Africa, or to other crocodyliforms like the Planocraniidae given their geographic range and ziphodont dentition. The phylogenetic tree recovered by this study is shown below.[3]

Palaeobiology

Fossils of various animals that coexisted with Doratodon

Palaeoecology

Doratodon is a cosmopolitan genus known from various European countries, which at the time would have been split into a series of islands and archipelagos separated by the Tethys Sea. Doratodon carcharidens has been found in the Campanian Grünbach Formation of Austria[2] and the Santonian Csehbánya Formation of Hungary.[3] Doratodon ibericus has only been found in the Sierra Perenchiza Formation in Spain, also dating to the Campanian.[11][4] Its presence in Italy and on Romanias Hateg Island during the Coniacian to Maastrichtian is also possible, but not certain.[5][9][10]

It has been suggested that Doratodon, like other ziphodont Notosuchians, was a terrestrial animal, which makes it an outlier in the Cretaceous crocodyliform fauna of Europe which is otherwise primarily composed of neosuchians, which favor more aquatic lifestyles.[4] Doratodon was a predatory animal, actively hunting the animals of its habitat, judging from the triangular, serrated teeth.[5][7]

The localities that preserve Doratodon are generally dominated by dinosaurs as the primary terrestrial fauna, especially rhabdodontids and the ankylosaur Struthiosaurus. Crocodylomorphs are also common, but primarilly in the form of Neosuchians. For instance, Acynodon[5] was found to inhabit Hateg and Spain while Iharkutosuchus was found in Hungary. Iberia was home to Musturzabalsuchus, Ischyrochampsa and Arenysuchus.[10] Allodaposuchus was another example of a cosmopolitan crocodyliform with a wide distribution across the European archipelago, being found in Romania, Hungary, Spain and various countries that have not yet yielded Doratodon fossils.[8][10][5] Both Hateg and the Csehbánya Formation additionally preserve remains of crocodylomorphs with heterodont[5] and pseudo-ziphodont teeth distinct from Doratodon as well as the remains of the small terrestrial atoposaurids.[10][7][8]

Paleobiogeography

During the Late Cretaceous Europe was largely spit into a series of islands.

The classification of Doratodon as a sebecosuchian or at the very least some type of crocodyliform with Gondwanan relations is an important aspect in determining the paleobiogeography of Cretaceous Europe and Africa. Notosuchians are a traditionally Gondwanan group, primarily found in the Cretaceous of South America and Africa. While some groups such as peirosaurids, uruguaysuchids and mahajangasuchids were found around the Mediterranean, sebecosuchians are not known from this region until the onset of the Cenozoic, when Eremosuchus lived in Algeria while Bergisuchus and Iberosuchus appeared in Europe. This already suggests that sebecosuchians must have been much more widespread than currently known, especially given the fact that phylogenetic analysis failed to find any close relationship between Doratodon and the more recent European sebecids.[4] Two major models have been proposed to explain the fauna native to the European archipelago and northern Africa during this time. According to the Eurogondwana model, Europe remained connected to Gondwana in some capacity until the Hauterivian, after the fauna of Asia and America had already been isolated from the other continents. The model further proposes that what followed was a period of isolation for Europe until making contact with Asiamerica during the Barremian to Campanian, allowing for a faunal interchange between the two regions. The Antlantogea model meanwhile suggests that during the Campanian to Maastrichtian Europe once again connected to Africa, by that point split from the rest of Gondwana, allowing for fauna to move between the continents until the Eocene.[3]

The discovery of Doratodon remains from the Santonian of Hungary indicates that the connection proposed by the Atlantogea model must have begun at the latest during this time period, pushing the onset of the faunal interchange back by several million years. Further support for this is offered by other vertebrate remains at the locality, which includes Gondwanan groups like bothremydid turtles and abelisaurs. Discoveries from the Coniacian of Italy and the Cenomanian of France may push the faunal interchange back even further, as does the presence of carcharodontosaurs, spinosaurs and pholidosaurs from the Barremian to Aptian on both continents. In general, this clashes with the idea that Africa and Europe became fully isolated from one another after the Hautverian.[3]

Since truly ziphodont crocodyliforms are not known from Europe prior to the appearance of Doratodon, Rabi and Sebök suggest that it must have been a true Late Cretaceous immigrant, rather than the result of a lineage that had arrived in the European archipelago during the Early Cretaceous.[3][10] Likewise, later European sebecids such as Bergisuchus and Iberosuchus likely arrived through separate events during the Paleogene, as they show no signs of being descendents of Doratodon and instead are considered to be much more derived members of Sebecosuchia.[3]

References

  1. ^ Seeley, H. G. (1881). "The Reptile Fauna of the Gosau Formation preserved in the Geological Museum of the University of Vienna". Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society. 37 (1–4): 620–706. doi:10.1144/GSL.JGS.1881.037.01-04.49.
  2. ^ a b c d Bunzel, Emanuel (1871). "Die Reptilfauna der Gosauformation in der Neuen Welt bei Wiener-Neustadt" (PDF). Abhandlungen der Kaiserlich-königlichen Geologischen Reichsanstalt (in German). 5: 1–18. Retrieved 11 September 2013.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Rabi, M.; Sebők, N. (2015). "A revised Eurogondwana model: Late Cretaceous notosuchian crocodyliforms and other vertebrate taxa suggest the retention of episodic faunal links between Europe and Gondwana during most of the Cretaceous" (PDF). Gondwana Research. 28 (3): 1197–1211. Bibcode:2015GondR..28.1197R. doi:10.1016/j.gr.2014.09.015.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Company, J.; Suberbiola, X.P.; Ruiz-Omeñaca, J.I.; Buscalioni, A.D. (2005). "A new species of Doratodon (Crocodyliformes: Ziphosuchia) from the Late Cretaceous of Spain" (PDF). Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 25 (2): 343–353. doi:10.1671/0272-4634(2005)025[0343:ANSODC]2.0.CO;2.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Martin, J.E.; Csiki, Z.; Grigorescu, D.; Buffetaut, E. (2006). "Late Cretaceous crocodilian diversity in Haţeg Basin, Romania" (PDF). Hantkeniana. 5: 31–37.
  6. ^ Vasile, S. (2008). "A new microvertebrate site from the Upper Cretaceous (Maastrichtian) deposits of the Haţeg Basin" (PDF). Sargetia. 21: 5–15.
  7. ^ a b c Martin, J.E.; Rabi, M.; Csiki, Z. (2010). "Survival of Theriosuchus (Mesoeucrocodylia: Atoposauridae) in a Late Cretaceous archipelago: a new species from the Maastrichtian of Romania" (PDF). Naturwissenschaften. 97: 845–854. doi:10.1007/s00114-010-0702-y.
  8. ^ a b c Vasile, S.; Csiki-Sava, Z.; Voicu, S.M. (2019). "New discoveries from the latest cretaceous „Pui Swamp" vertebrate fossil locality (Haţeg Basin, Hunedoara County)" (PDF). Argesis. Studii şi comunicări. Ştiinţele Naturii. 27: 91–104.
  9. ^ a b Dalla Vecchia, F.M.; Cau, C. (2011). "The first record of a notosuchian crocodyliform from Italy" (PDF). Rivista Italiana di Paleontologia e Stratigrafia. 117 (2): 309–321.
  10. ^ a b c d e f Csiki-Sava, Zoltan; Buffetaut, Eric; Ősi, Attila; Pereda-Suberbiola, Xabier; Brusatte, Stephen L. (2015). "Island life in the Cretaceous – faunal composition, biogeography, evolution, and extinction of land-living vertebrates on the Late Cretaceous European archipelago". ZooKeys. 469: 1–161. doi:10.3897/zookeys.469.8439.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: unflagged free DOI (link)
  11. ^ Company, Julio; Szentesi, Zoltán (2012). "Amphibians from the Late Cretaceous Sierra Perenchiza Formation of the Chera Basin, Valencia Province, Spain". Cretaceous Research. 37: 240–245. doi:10.1016/j.cretres.2012.04.003.