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Paradracaena

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Paradracaena
Temporal range: Miocene
~13–7 Ma
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Squamata
Family: Teiidae
Genus: Dracaena
Species:
D. colombiana
Binomial name
Dracaena colombiana
(Estes 1961)
Synonyms
  • Tupinambis huilensis Estes 1961
  • Dracaena colombiana Sullivan & Estes 1997

Paradracaena is an extinct genus of lizards from northern South America. Fossils of Dracaena colombiana have been found in the Honda Group of Colombia, Peru and Brazil . The species was described as a member of the tegus; Tupinambis huilensis by Estes in 1961.

Description

A modern relative, the caiman lizard Dracaena guianensis

Paradracaena colombiana[1] was first described as Tupinambis huilensis by Estes in 1961, later named Paradracaena colombiana by Sullivan and Estes in 1997.[2] These ground dwelling insectivore-carnivores were described from fossils found in fluvial and lacustrine clays of the Middle Miocene (Laventan in the SALMA classification) Villavieja Formation in Colombia.[3] They share a number of features with extant caiman lizards, such as large teeth and a robust quadrate, but also bear more primitive characteristics such as a higher tooth count.[4]

Distribution

Apart from the type locality in the Honda Group, fossils attributed to the genus Paradracaena were recovered from the Pebas and Solimões Formations of the Amazon Basin of respectively Peru and Brazil.[5][6]

See also

References

  1. ^ Dracaena colombiana at GBIF
  2. ^ Sullivan & Estes, 1997, p.102
  3. ^ Dracaena colombiana at Fossilworks.org
  4. ^ Sullivan & Estes, 1997, p.111
  5. ^ Pujos et al., 2009, p.594
  6. ^ Hsiou et al., 2009, p.227

Bibliography