Note to users. If you're seeing this message, it means that your browser cannot find this page's style/presentation instructions -- or possibly that you are using a browser that does not support current Web standards. Find out more about why this message is appearing, and what you can do to make your experience of our site the best it can be.


Science 2 July 1982:
Vol. 217. no. 4554, pp. 53 - 55
DOI: 10.1126/science.217.4554.53

Articles

Juvenile-Adult Habitat Shift in Permian Fossil Reptiles and Amphibians

ROBERT T. BAKKER 1

1 Department of Earth and Planetary Science, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland 21218

Among extant large reptiles, juveniles often occupy different habitats from those of adults or subadults and thus avoid competition with and predation from the older animals; small juveniles often choose cryptic habitats because they are vulnerable to a wide variety of predators. Evidence from fossil humeri and femora of Early Permian reptiles collected from sediments of several distinct habitats indicate that similar shifts in habitat occurred. Juvenile Dimetrodon seem to have favored cryptic habitats around swamp and swampy lake margins; adults favored open habitats on the floodplains. Similar patterns of habitat shift seem to be present in the reptile Ophiacodon and the amphibian Eryops and may have been common in fossil tetrapods of the Permian-Triassic.

Submitted on April 6, 1982


THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES:
Developmental palaeontology in synapsids: the fossil record of ontogeny in mammals and their closest relatives.
M. R. Sanchez-Villagra (2010)
Proc R Soc B
   Abstract »    Full Text »    PDF »
THE POSTCRANIAL SKELETON OF TRIMERORHACHIS INSIGNIS COPE, 1878 (TEMNOSPONDYLI: TRIMERORHACHIDAE): A PLESIOMORPHIC TEMNOSPONDYL FROM THE LOWER PERMIAN OF NORTH AMERICA.
K. PAWLEY (2007)
Journal of Paleontology 81, 873-894
   Abstract »    Full Text »    PDF »
THE APPENDICULAR SKELETON OF ERYOPS MEGACEPHALUS COPE, 1877 (TEMNOSPONDYLI: ERYOPOIDEA) FROM THE LOWER PERMIAN OF NORTH AMERICA.
K. PAWLEY and A. WARREN (2006)
Journal of Paleontology 80, 561-580
   Abstract »    Full Text »    PDF »



To Advertise     Find Products


Science. ISSN 0036-8075 (print), 1095-9203 (online)