Tuesday, March 10, 2026

[Paleontology • 2026] Tanyka amnicola • An aberrant Stem Tetrapod from the early Permian of Brazil

 

Tanyka amnicola
 Pardo, Marsicano, Smith, Cisneros, Angielczyk, Fröbisch, Kammerer & Richter, 2026
 
Illustration by Vitor Silva

Abstract
Early evolutionary history of tetrapods is typically divided into two major phases: an initial diversification of archaic stem tetrapod groups, and a sudden replacement by temnospondyl amphibians and amniotes following a late Carboniferous dry interval termed the Carboniferous Rainforest Collapse (CRC). However, the degree to which this scenario applies to the early tetrapods of Gondwana is uncertain. Here, we report Tanyka amnicola, gen. et sp. nov., an archaic stem tetrapod from the early Permian of Brazil characterized by strong torsion of the mandibular ramus and a remarkable battery of enlarged denticles on a strongly arched coronoid. The new taxon is assigned to the tetrapod stem based on the presence of a denticulate adsymphyseal and elevated hook-like glenoid surface without a postglenoid area. Phylogenetic analysis shows affinities between this species and stem tetrapods more proximal to the tetrapod crown group, particularly Eucritta and the Laurussian baphetids. This is the second stem tetrapod group known to have survived until the end of the early Permian in Gondwana despite local extirpation in Laurussia, implying that current hypotheses of Carboniferous tetrapod turnover are oversimplified. The unique jaw morphology suggests adaptations to either specialized processing of small invertebrates or consumption of some plant material, demonstrating that stem tetrapods continued to explore new niche space into the Permian of Gondwana.

Keywords: Permian, Tetrapoda, palaeobiogeography

Holotype jaw of Tanyka amnicola, MAP-PV 662.
(a) MAP-PV 662 in dorsal view; (b) interpretive drawing of MAP-PV 662 in dorsal view;
(c) MAP-PV 662 in ventral view; (d) interpretive drawing of MAP-PV 662 in ventral view.
adsym, adsymphyseal; an, angular; ar, articular; c1, first coronoid; c2, second coronoid; c3, third coronoid; ct, foramen for chorda tympani; d, dentary; laf, lateral angular flange; Mf, Meckelian fenestra; par, prearticular; pMf, pre-Meckelian foramina; pspl, postsplenial, sa, surangular; sfp, symphyseal fang pair of dentary; spl, splenial.

Tetrapodamorpha Ahlberg, 1991

Tanyka amnicola gen. et sp. nov.

Holotype. MAP-PV 662, nearly complete left mandible. Accessioned at Museu de Arqueologia e Paleontologia (MAP) at Universidade Federal do Piauí, Teresina, Brazil.

Type locality and horizon. Pedra de Fogo riverbank, MAP locality PB 156, south of Pastos Bons, Maranhão, lower Pedra de Fogo Formation, early Permian.

 
Etymology. Guarani: tañykã, meaning ‘jaw’ or ‘chin’, and Latin: amnicola, meaning ‘living in or next to the river’ the latter being a reference both to the river bed in Pastos Bons where the holotype was found and also to the presumed aquatic habits of the stem tetrapod.

Diagnosis. Stem tetrapod of moderate size. Adsymphyseal and all coronoids covered in a thickly ankylosed and arched denticle pad much wider than the tooth row. Occlusal surface of jaw, including coronoid denticle plate, faces more labially than dorsally when jaw is in neutral position. Ventral margin of jaw ramus wider than dentary-coronoid area. Angular with prominent sculptured flange. Prearticular braces articular medially with a large triangular process. Meckelian foramen small (less than one-third the depth of the prearticular).

Jaw rotation during mandibular adduction in Tanyka.
(a) Jaw in closed position, lateral view; (b) jaw in closed position, anterior view;
(c) jaw in open position, lateral view; (d) jaw in open position, anterior view.
General skull shape speculative, based on Baphetes

Illustration showing Tanyka amnicola in life, eating underwater plants.
 Artwork: Vitor Silva
 

Jason D. Pardo; Claudia A. Marsicano; Roger Smith; Juan Carlos Cisneros; Kenneth D. Angielczyk; Jörg Fröbisch; Christian F. Kammerer; Martha Richter. 2026. An aberrant Stem Tetrapod from the early Permian of Brazil. Proc Biol Sci. 293 (2066): 20252106. DOI: doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2025.2106 [04 Mar 2026]