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      Anatomy and systematics of the diplodocoid Amphicoelias altus supports high sauropod dinosaur diversity in the Upper Jurassic Morrison Formation of the USA

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      1 , , 2 , 3 , 4 , 5
      Royal Society Open Science
      The Royal Society
      Dinosauria, Diplodocus, Late Jurassic, Morrison Formation, ontogeny, Sauropoda

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          Abstract

          Sauropod dinosaurs were an abundant and diverse component of the Upper Jurassic Morrison Formation of the USA, with 24 currently recognized species. However, some authors consider this high diversity to have been ecologically unviable and the validity of some species has been questioned, with suggestions that they represent growth series (ontogimorphs) of other species. Under this scenario, high sauropod diversity in the Late Jurassic of North America is greatly overestimated. One putative ontogimorph is the enigmatic diplodocoid Amphicoelias altus, which has been suggested to be synonymous with Diplodocus. Given that Amphicoelias was named first, it has priority and thus Diplodocus would become its junior synonym. Here, we provide a detailed re-description of A. altus in which we restrict it to the holotype individual and support its validity, based on three autapomorphies. Constraint analyses demonstrate that its phylogenetic position within Diplodocoidea is labile, but it seems unlikely that Amphicoelias is synonymous with Diplodocus. As such, our re-evaluation also leads us to retain Diplodocus as a distinct genus. There is no evidence to support the view that any of the currently recognized Morrison sauropod species are ontogimorphs. Available data indicate that sauropod anatomy did not dramatically alter once individuals approached maturity. Furthermore, subadult sauropod individuals are not prone to stemward slippage in phylogenetic analyses, casting doubt on the possibility that their taxonomic affinities are substantially misinterpreted. An anatomical feature can have both an ontogenetic and phylogenetic signature, but the former does not outweigh the latter when other characters overwhelmingly support the affinities of a taxon. Many Morrison Formation sauropods were spatio-temporally and/or ecologically separated from one another. Combined with the biases that cloud our reading of the fossil record, we contend that the number of sauropod dinosaur species in the Morrison Formation is currently likely to be underestimated, not overestimated.

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          TNT version 1.5, including a full implementation of phylogenetic morphometrics

          Version 1.5 of the computer program TNT completely integrates landmark data into phylogenetic analysis. Landmark data consist of coordinates (in two or three dimensions) for the terminal taxa; TNT reconstructs shapes for the internal nodes such that the difference between ancestor and descendant shapes for all tree branches sums up to a minimum; this sum is used as tree score. Landmark data can be analysed alone or in combination with standard characters; all the applicable commands and options in TNT can be used transparently after reading a landmark data set. The program continues implementing all the types of analyses in former versions, including discrete and continuous characters (which can now be read at any scale, and automatically rescaled by TNT). Using algorithms described in this paper, searches for landmark data can be made tens to hundreds of times faster than it was possible before (from T to 3T times faster, where T is the number of taxa), thus making phylogenetic analysis of landmarks feasible even on standard personal computers.
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            TNT, a free program for phylogenetic analysis

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              Sauropod dinosaur phylogeny: critique and cladistic analysis

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                R Soc Open Sci
                RSOS
                royopensci
                Royal Society Open Science
                The Royal Society
                2054-5703
                June 16, 2021
                June 2021
                : 8
                : 6
                : 210377
                Affiliations
                [ 1 ]Department of Earth Sciences, University College London, , London WC1E 6BT, UK
                [ 2 ]Centrum für Naturkunde, Universität Hamburg, , 20146 Hamburg, Germany
                [ 3 ]Division of Paleontology, American Museum of Natural History, , Central Park West at 79th Street, New York, NY 10024-5192, USA
                [ 4 ]Department of Science and Mathematics, Mount Aloysius College, , Cresson, PA 16630-1999, USA
                [ 5 ]Section of Vertebrate Paleontology, Carnegie Museum of Natural History, , Pittsburgh, PA 15213-4007, USA
                Author notes

                Electronic supplementary material is available online at https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.5448847.

                Author information
                http://orcid.org/0000-0002-9361-6941
                http://orcid.org/0000-0002-5245-6910
                http://orcid.org/0000-0002-1118-2925
                Article
                rsos210377
                10.1098/rsos.210377
                8206699
                34150318
                7f8acf23-d0c4-49c2-a8ad-cc0348331a29
                © 2021 The Authors.

                Published by the Royal Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/, which permits unrestricted use, provided the original author and source are credited.

                History
                : March 5, 2021
                : May 26, 2021
                Funding
                Funded by: American Museum of Natural History Division of Paleontology Postdoctoral Fellowship;
                Funded by: Royal Society, http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100000288;
                Award ID: University Research Fellowship (UF160216)
                Categories
                1001
                60
                70
                144
                Organismal and Evolutionary Biology
                Research Articles

                dinosauria,diplodocus,late jurassic,morrison formation,ontogeny,sauropoda

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