A new crocodylomorph tooth assemblage from the Tataouine Basin and comments on the stratigraphic context of the Douiret Formation

2020 
Abstract A new crocodylomorph tooth assemblage from the Lower Member of the Douiret Formation (uppermost Jurassic–lowermost Cretaceous) in southeastern Tunisia is described. These teeth have been grouped into five morphotypes based on their diagnostic morphological features. The sample includes teeth, which have not been reported until now, such as non-Machimosaurini teleosauroid teeth, and labiolingually compressed tooth crowns with cutting edges devoid of serrations. Certain minor morphometric differences have been interpreted as ontogenetic or being possibly related to the position of the teeth in the jaws. Three trophic entities have subsequently been defined on the basis of the morphological characteristics of the teeth, and a possible niche partitioning between at least three crocodylomorph taxa is highlighted for the first time in the Tataouine Basin. On the other hand, the stratigraphic context of the Douiret Formation is thoroughly discussed in order to show how stratigraphic uncertainties could significantly impact previous attempts at reconstructing the macroevolutionary history of Crocodylomorpha. The latter should be treated with caution when the stratigraphic context of the fossil bearing formation remains a subject of debate.
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