Nochnitsa
Nochnitsa Temporal range: Permian,
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Holotype block, containing skull and partial skeleton | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Clade: | Synapsida |
Clade: | Therapsida |
Clade: | †Gorgonopsia |
Genus: | †Nochnitsa Kammerer and Masyutin, 2018 |
Type species | |
† Nochnitsa geminidens Kammerer and Masyutin, 2018
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Nochnitsa is a genus of gorgonopsian therapsid from the Kotelnich red beds of Permian Russia. It contains one species, Nochnitsa geminidens. It the most basal known gorgonopsian and among the smallest members of the clade known to date.
Discovery and naming
Nochnitsa is known from only one specimen, the holotype KPM 310. It was found in Vanyushonki Member of the Kotelnich red beds, along the Vyatka River in Kirov Oblast, which dates to the latest Guadalupian or early Lopingian epochs.[1]
Nochnitsa is named after the Nocnitsa, a nocturnal hag-like creature from Slavic mythology. Its name was intended as a parallel to the Gorgons, similarly hag-like creatures from Greek mythology, which are the namesake of many genera within Gorgonopsia and the clade as a whole.[1] The name also reflects the nocturnal habits inferred for the genus.[2] The type species name, N. geminidens, means "twin tooth" and refers to one of the autapomorphies of the species, postcanine teeth arranged in pairs.
Description
Nochnitsa is small for a gorgonopsian, with a skull only 82 millimetres (3.2 in) long. It had a relatively long snout with five incisors, a canine, and six postcanine teeth on each side. The postcanine teeth are autapomorphic for the genus in being arranged in three pairs of closely placed teeth separated by longer diastemata. In each pair, the posterior tooth is larger. The mandible is relatively slender and lacks a strong "chin", unlike other gorgonopsians.[1]
Classification
Nochnitsa is the most basal known gorgonopsian.[1]
Paleobiology
Nochnitsa was a small predator, unlike later gorgonopsians which were large-bodied apex predators.[1] It was a relatively rare member of its ecosystem. The apex predators of the Kotelnich faunal assemblage were large-bodied therocephalians such as Gorynychus and Viatkosuchus.[3]
References
- ^ a b c d e
Kammerer, Christian F.; Masyutin, Vladimir (2018). "Gorgonopsian therapsids (Nochnitsa gen. nov. and Viatkogorgon) from the Permian Kotelnich locality of Russia". PeerJ. 6: e4954. doi:10.7717/peerj.4954. PMC 5995105. PMID 29900078.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: unflagged free DOI (link) - ^ North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences (8 June 2018). "'Monstrous' new Russian saber-tooth fossils clarify early evolution of mammal lineage". ScienceDaily.
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Kammerer, Christian F.; Masyutin, Vladimir (2018). "A new therocephalian (Gorynychus masyutinae gen. et sp. nov.) from the Permian Kotelnich locality, Kirov Region, Russia". PeerJ. 6: e4933. doi:10.7717/peerj.4933. PMC 5995100. PMID 29900076.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: unflagged free DOI (link)