Mesozoic crurotarsans exhibited diverse morphologies and feeding modes, representing considerable ecological diversity, yet macroevolutionary patterns remain unexplored. Here we employ a unique combination of morphological and biomechanical disparity metrics to quantify the ecological diversity and trophic radiations of Mesozoic crurotarsans, using the mandible as a morpho-functional proxy. We recover three major trends. First, the diverse assemblage of Late Triassic crurotarsans was morphologically and biomechanically disparate, implying high levels of ecological variation; but, following the end-Triassic extinction, disparity declined. Second, the Jurassic radiation of marine thalattosuchians resulted in very low morphological disparity b...
The radiation of mammals after the Cretaceous/Palaeogene (K/Pg) boundary was a major event in the ev...
Mosasauroidea, important marine lizards (Squamata, Toxicofera) of the final 30 million years of the ...
Mosasaurid squamates were the dominant amniote predators in marine ecosystems during most of the Lat...
Mesozoic crurotarsans exhibited diverse morphologies and feeding modes, representing considerable ec...
Morphological responses of nonmammalian herbivores to external ecological drivers have not been quan...
During the Mesozoic, Crocodylomorpha had a much higher taxonomic and morphological diversity than to...
The southern supercontinent of Gondwana was home to an extraordinary diversity of stem-crocodylians ...
High megaherbivore species richness is documented in both fossil and contemporary ecosystems despite...
Crocodylomorpha, which includes living crocodylians and their extinct relatives, has a rich fossil r...
Understanding temporal patterns in biodiversity is an enduring question in paleontology. Compared to...
Mesozoic marine ecosystems were dominated by several clades of reptiles, including sauropterygians, ...
All modern crocodyliforms (alligators, crocodiles and the gharial) are semi-aquatic generalist carni...
The radiation of mammals after the Cretaceous/Palaeogene (K/Pg) boundary was a major event in the ev...
Mosasauroidea, important marine lizards (Squamata, Toxicofera) of the final 30 million years of the ...
Mosasaurid squamates were the dominant amniote predators in marine ecosystems during most of the Lat...
Mesozoic crurotarsans exhibited diverse morphologies and feeding modes, representing considerable ec...
Morphological responses of nonmammalian herbivores to external ecological drivers have not been quan...
During the Mesozoic, Crocodylomorpha had a much higher taxonomic and morphological diversity than to...
The southern supercontinent of Gondwana was home to an extraordinary diversity of stem-crocodylians ...
High megaherbivore species richness is documented in both fossil and contemporary ecosystems despite...
Crocodylomorpha, which includes living crocodylians and their extinct relatives, has a rich fossil r...
Understanding temporal patterns in biodiversity is an enduring question in paleontology. Compared to...
Mesozoic marine ecosystems were dominated by several clades of reptiles, including sauropterygians, ...
All modern crocodyliforms (alligators, crocodiles and the gharial) are semi-aquatic generalist carni...
The radiation of mammals after the Cretaceous/Palaeogene (K/Pg) boundary was a major event in the ev...
Mosasauroidea, important marine lizards (Squamata, Toxicofera) of the final 30 million years of the ...
Mosasaurid squamates were the dominant amniote predators in marine ecosystems during most of the Lat...