-
Views
-
Cite
Cite
HUSSAM ZAHER, SEBASTIÁN APESTEGUÍA, CARLOS AGUSTÍN SCANFERLA, The anatomy of the upper cretaceous snake Najash rionegrina Apesteguía & Zaher, 2006, and the evolution of limblessness in snakes, Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, Volume 156, Issue 4, August 2009, Pages 801–826, https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1096-3642.2009.00511.x
- Share Icon Share
Abstract
Najash rionegrina Apesteguía & Zaher, 2006, a terrestrial fossil snake from the Upper Cretaceous of Argentina, represents the first known snake with a sacrum associated with robust, well-developed hind limbs. Najash rionegrina documents an important gap in the evolutionary development towards limblessness, because its phylogenetic affinities suggest that it is the sister group of all modern snakes, including the limbed Tethyan snakes Pachyrhachis, Haasiophis, and Eupodophis. The latter three limbed marine fossil snakes are shown to be more derived morphologically, because they lack a sacrum, but have articulated lymphapophyses, and their appendicular skeleton is enclosed by the rib cage, as in modern snakes.