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      Revised phylogenetic analysis of the Aetosauria (Archosauria: Pseudosuchia); assessing the effects of incongruent morphological character sets

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      1 , 2 ,
      PeerJ
      PeerJ Inc.
      Triassic, Aetosauria, Chinle Formation, Phylogeny, Partitioned Bremer Support, Pseudosuchia

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          Abstract

          Aetosauria is an early-diverging clade of pseudosuchians (crocodile-line archosaurs) that had a global distribution and high species diversity as a key component of various Late Triassic terrestrial faunas. It is one of only two Late Triassic clades of large herbivorous archosaurs, and thus served a critical ecological role. Nonetheless, aetosaur phylogenetic relationships are still poorly understood, owing to an overreliance on osteoderm characters, which are often poorly constructed and suspected to be highly homoplastic. A new phylogenetic analysis of the Aetosauria, comprising 27 taxa and 83 characters, includes more than 40 new characters that focus on better sampling the cranial and endoskeletal regions, and represents the most comprenhensive phylogeny of the clade to date. Parsimony analysis recovered three most parsimonious trees; the strict consensus of these trees finds an Aetosauria that is divided into two main clades: Desmatosuchia, which includes the Desmatosuchinae and the Stagonolepidinae, and Aetosaurinae, which includes the Typothoracinae. As defined Desmatosuchinae now contains Neoaetosauroides engaeus and several taxa that were previously referred to the genus Stagonolepis, and a new clade, Desmatosuchini, is erected for taxa more closely related to Desmatosuchus. Overall support for some clades is still weak, and Partitioned Bremer Support (PBS) is applied for the first time to a strictly morphological dataset demonstrating that this weak support is in part because of conflict in the phylogenetic signals of cranial versus postcranial characters. PBS helps identify homoplasy among characters from various body regions, presumably the result of convergent evolution within discrete anatomical modules. It is likely that at least some of this character conflict results from different body regions evolving at different rates, which may have been under different selective pressures.

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              A Concern for Evidence and a Phylogenetic Hypothesis of Relationships Among Epicrates (Boidae, Serpentes)

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                PeerJ
                PeerJ
                PeerJ
                PeerJ
                PeerJ
                PeerJ Inc. (San Francisco, USA )
                2167-8359
                21 January 2016
                2016
                : 4
                : e1583
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Division of Resource Management, Petrified Forest National Park , Arizona, United States
                [2 ]Jackson School of Geosciences, University of Texas at Austin , Austin, Texas, United States
                Article
                1583
                10.7717/peerj.1583
                4727975
                8fe5fd4a-31db-4601-8618-cd3ea90bdd7e
                © 2016 Parker

                This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaptation in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. For attribution, the original author(s), title, publication source (PeerJ) and either DOI or URL of the article must be cited.

                History
                : 7 October 2015
                : 18 December 2015
                Funding
                Financial assistance for this project was provided by the Jackson School of Geosciences, the Lundelius Fund, the Francis L. Whitney Endowed Presidential Scholarship, the Ronald K. DeFord Scholarship Fund, the Samuel and Doris Welles Fund, and the Systematics Association. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.
                Categories
                Evolutionary Studies
                Paleontology

                triassic,aetosauria,chinle formation,phylogeny,partitioned bremer support,pseudosuchia

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