Lissamphibia

Lissamphibia

Taxobox
name = Lissamphibia
fossil_range = Early Triassic - Recent


image_width = 230px
image_caption = The fire salamander
regnum = Animalia
phylum = Chordata
subphylum = Vertebrata
superclassis = Tetrapoda
classis = Amphibia
subclassis = Lissamphibia
subclassis_authority = Haeckel, 1866
subdivision_ranks = Orders
subdivision =
Anura
Caudata
GymnophionaAllocaudata
The subclass "Lissamphibia" includes all recent amphibians.

Extant amphibians fall into one of three orders - the "Anura" (frogs, including toads), the "Caudata" or "Urodela" (salamanders, including newts), and the "Gymnophiona" or "Apoda" (the limbless caecilians). Although the ancestry of each group is controversial, all share certain common characteristics, which indicates they evolved from a common ancestor and so form a clade. The publication of a Permian-period stem form "Gerobatrachus hottoni" showed the frogs and salamanders had a common ancestor more recently (ca 290 Mya) than had been thought by using the molecular clock alone.

Relationships and controversy

Whilst the monophyly of the Lissamphibia is accepted by many herpetologists and paleontologists, the origin and relationships of the various Lissamphibian groups both with each other and among other early tetrapods remains controversial. Not all paleontologists are convinced that the lissamphibia are indeed a natural group, as the various characteristics are also shared with some Paleozoic amphibians, and it is still possible that these characteristics evolved independently.

Currently there are three prevailing theories of Lissamphibian origin: monophyletic within the temnospondyli, monophyletic within lepospondyli, and diphyletic (two separate ancestries) with apodans within the lepospondyls and salamanders and frogs within the temnospondyli.

Characteristics

The following characteristics are shared by some, most, or all Lissamphibia. Some of these apply to the soft body parts and hence not present in fossils. Those which refer to the skeleton and are fossilisable are also known from several types of Palaeozoic amphibians - most )

* Two types of skin glands (mucous & granular)
* Fat bodies associated with gonads
* Double-channeled sensory in the inner ear
* Green rods (a special type of visual cell, unknown in caecilians)
* Ribs do not encircle body
* Ability to elevate the eye (with levetator bulbi muscle)
* Forced pump respiratory mechanism
* Cylindrical centra (the main body of the vertebra; cylindrical centra are also found in several groups of early tetrapods)
* Pedicellate teeth (the crown of the teeth is separated from the root by a zone of fibrous tissue; also found in some Dissorophoidea; the teeth of some fossil salamanders are not pedicellate)
* Bicuspid teeth (two cusps per tooth, also found in juvenile dissorophoids)
* Operculum (small bone in the skull, linked to shoulder girdle by the opercularis muscle; perhaps involved in hearing and balance; absent in caecilians and some salamanders, fused to the stapes (ear bones) in most anurans)
* Loss of posterior skull bones (also in Microsauria and Dissorophoidea)
* Small, widely separated pterygoids (also found in Temnospondyli and Nectridea)
* Wide cultriform process of the parasphenoid (also found in some Microsauria ("Rhynchonchos") and Lysorophia)
* Double or paired occipital condyle

External links

* [http://www.erin.utoronto.ca/~w3bio356/lecture_info/lecture_notes/lepospondyls_and_lissamphibians.pdf Biology 356 - Major Features of Vertebrate Evolution] by Dr. Robert Reisz, University of Toronto

References

* Benton, M. J. (2005), "Vertebrate Paleontology", 3rd ed. Blackwell Science Ltd
* Carroll, RL (1988), "Vertebrate Paleontology and Evolution", WH Freeman & Co.
*cite journal
last = San Mauro
first = Diego
title = Initial diversification of living amphibians predated the breakup of Pangaea
url = http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/AN/journal/issues/v165n5/40546/40546.html
journal = American Naturalist
volume = 165
pages = 590–599
year = 2005
month = May
coauthors = Miguel Vences, Marina Alcobendas, Rafael Zardoya and Axel Meyer
doi = 10.1086/429523
format = dead link|date=June 2008 – [http://scholar.google.co.uk/scholar?hl=en&lr=&q=author%3ASan+Mauro+intitle%3AInitial+diversification+of+living+amphibians+predated+the+breakup+of+Pangaea&as_publication=American+Naturalist&as_ylo=2005&as_yhi=2005&btnG=Search Scholar search]


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