Chroniosuchia is a group of
tetrapods that lived from the
Middle Permian to
Late Triassic in what is now
Eastern Europe,
Kyrgyzstan,[1]China and
Germany.[2] Chroniosuchians are often thought to be
reptiliomorphs,[3] but some recent phylogenetic analyses suggest instead that they are
stem-tetrapods.[4] They were all rather short limbed with a strong tail and elongated snout, somewhat resembling modern
crocodiles. The group is traditionally considered to be a suborder or order of
labyrinthodonts. Chroniosuchians likely had ecological niches as riverside predators, and may have been outcompeted by semiaquatic true reptiles such as
phytosaurs in the late
Triassic. Most forms bore a heavy armour of
scutes along the back, possibly for protection against land born predators like
therapsids, or to strengthen the axial skeleton for terrestrial locomotion. Indeed, femoral microanatomy of Chroniosaurus suggests that it was amphibious to terrestrial.[5]
Description
The most distinguishing features of chroniosuchians are the rows of interlocking bony plates called
osteoderms that run along their backs from head to tail. They are the most commonly found remains of chroniosuchians. Each osteoderm is paired with a single vertebra. The osteoderms are flat plates connected to the
neural arches of vertebra by an extension of bone on their undersurfaces. The front margin of each osteoderm has a pair of "anterior wings" that slip into a notch in the posterior margin of the osteoderm in front of it.[6]
Chroniosuchians are distinguished from other early reptiliomorphs by the lack of
intertemporal bones in the skull, as well as the presence of holes in front of the eye sockets called
antorbital fenestrae. Like many early tetrapods, chroniosuchians have vertebrae that are divided into three parts: a
pleurocentrum and an
intercentrum on the bottom, and a neural arch on top. Chroniosuchians have shizomerous vertebrae, meaning that the pleurocentrum makes up most of the
body of the vertebra while the intercentrum is small and wedge-like.[6]