Feeding in Sphenodon, the tuatara of New Zealand, is of interest for several reasons. First, the modern animal is threatened by extinction, and some populations are in competition for food with Pacific rats. Second, Sphenodon demonstrates a feeding apparatus that is unique to living amniotes: an enlarged palatine tooth row, acrodont dentition, enlarged incisor-like teeth on the premaxilla, a posterior extension of the dentary and an elongate articular surtace that permits prooral shearing. Third, Sphenodon has a skull with two complete lateral temporal bars and is therefore structurally analogous to the configuration hypothesised for the ancestral diapsid reptile. Furthermore, the fossil relatives of Sphenodon demonstrate considerable varia...
This thesis is centred around an anatomical study of the cranial osteology of the Mesozoic sphenodon...
In limbless fossorial vertebrates such as caecilians (Gymnophiona), head-first burrowing imposes sev...
Background: Placodontia is a Triassic sauropterygian reptile group characterized by flat and enlarge...
Feeding in Sphenodon, the tuatara of New Zealand, is of interest for several reasons. First, the mod...
The masticatory pattern of Sphenodon punctatus , the sole remaining rhynchocephalian, now restricte...
The tuatara, Sphenodon, is the sole extant representative of the Rhynchoccphalia, a group of diapsid...
The anatomy of the extant lepidosaur Sphenodon (New Zealand tuatara) has been extensively examined b...
The anatomy of the extant lepidosaur Sphenodon (New Zealand tuatara) has been extensively examined b...
The tuatara (Sphenodon punctatus) is the only living representative of Rhynchocephalia, a group of s...
The relationship between skull shape and the forces generated during feeding is currently under wide...
We describe a new, small-bodied rhynchocephalian reptile, Opisthiamimus gregori gen. et sp. nov., fr...
The vertebrate skull evolved to protect the brain and sense organs, but with the appearance of jaws ...
The tuatara (Sphenodon punctatus) from New Zealand is often—erroneously—identified as a ‘living foss...
Sphenodon punctatus, the tuatara, is the last survivor of the formerly widely distributed group of R...
The morphology and arrangement of the jaw adductor muscles in vertebrates reflects masticatory style...
This thesis is centred around an anatomical study of the cranial osteology of the Mesozoic sphenodon...
In limbless fossorial vertebrates such as caecilians (Gymnophiona), head-first burrowing imposes sev...
Background: Placodontia is a Triassic sauropterygian reptile group characterized by flat and enlarge...
Feeding in Sphenodon, the tuatara of New Zealand, is of interest for several reasons. First, the mod...
The masticatory pattern of Sphenodon punctatus , the sole remaining rhynchocephalian, now restricte...
The tuatara, Sphenodon, is the sole extant representative of the Rhynchoccphalia, a group of diapsid...
The anatomy of the extant lepidosaur Sphenodon (New Zealand tuatara) has been extensively examined b...
The anatomy of the extant lepidosaur Sphenodon (New Zealand tuatara) has been extensively examined b...
The tuatara (Sphenodon punctatus) is the only living representative of Rhynchocephalia, a group of s...
The relationship between skull shape and the forces generated during feeding is currently under wide...
We describe a new, small-bodied rhynchocephalian reptile, Opisthiamimus gregori gen. et sp. nov., fr...
The vertebrate skull evolved to protect the brain and sense organs, but with the appearance of jaws ...
The tuatara (Sphenodon punctatus) from New Zealand is often—erroneously—identified as a ‘living foss...
Sphenodon punctatus, the tuatara, is the last survivor of the formerly widely distributed group of R...
The morphology and arrangement of the jaw adductor muscles in vertebrates reflects masticatory style...
This thesis is centred around an anatomical study of the cranial osteology of the Mesozoic sphenodon...
In limbless fossorial vertebrates such as caecilians (Gymnophiona), head-first burrowing imposes sev...
Background: Placodontia is a Triassic sauropterygian reptile group characterized by flat and enlarge...