Abstract
Notosuchia is a group of crocodyliforms with mostly terrestrial habits that lived during the Mesozoic and up to the Miocene. Within this group Uruguaysuchidae is so far represented by eight species, six of them clustered in the genus Araripesuchus. Two species of this genus, A. patagonicus and A. buitreraensis, come from different localities in Patagonia (Argentina) from the Candeleros Formation (Cenomanian age). Here we present a third species of Araripesuchus from this formation. The new species comes from the same locality as Araripesuchus buitreraensis, but differs in numerous features including the presence of different molariform teeth. The new species was included in a phylogenetic analysis and, in agreement with previous analyses, Uruguaysuchidae is recovered as monophyletic and placed within Notosuchia as the sister clade of Peirosauridae. Uruguaysuchidae includes all species of Araripesuchus as well as Anatosuchus minor and Uruguaysuchus aznarezi. The new species adds new information to the ecological diversity of the group its bulbous molariforms with a quadrangular occlusal surface bounded by mamelons is interpreted as indicative of a durophagous diet, suggesting the presence of niche partitioning between the two sympatric species A. manzanensis and A. buitreraensis.
Keywords: Notosuchia, Araripesuchus, Patagonia, La Buitrera, durophagous diet, niche partitioning
María Lucila Fernández Dumont, Diego Pol, Paula Bona and Sebastián Apesteguía. 2024. A New Species of Araripesuchus with durophagous dentition increases the ecological disparity among uruguaysuchid crocodyliforms. Journal of Systematic Palaeontology. 22(1); 2373987. DOI: doi.org/10.1080/14772019.2024.2373987