Was Hupehsuchus a baleen whale-style filter feeder in the Early Triassic? A re-examination of the evidence
Ryosuke Motani, Nicholas D. Pyenson, Da-yong Jiang

TL;DR
This paper re-examines whether a small Early Triassic marine reptile, Hupehsuchus, was a filter feeder like modern baleen whales and finds the evidence insufficient.
Contribution
The study identifies errors in prior morphometric analysis and shows that Hupehsuchus does not share key traits with filter-feeding whales.
Findings
Hupehsuchus does not overlap in morphospace with any living cetaceans when using accurate data.
There is no evidence of an intraoral space for baleen or morphology suitable for baleen whale-style feeding.
Energetic and anatomical factors suggest baleen-style filter feeding was unlikely for Hupehsuchus.
Abstract
One of the recurring paleobiological questions over the last three decades has been whether there were any filter feeding tetrapods before whales evolved. Recently, a study proposed that a small marine reptile from the Early Triassic, Hupehsuchus nanchangensis, filter-fed in a mode similar to living right and bowhead whales (Balaenidae). The case for filter feeding was largely based on perceived similarities in dorsal-view cranial morphology between Hupehsuchus and Balaenidae, analyzed through geometric morphometrics of 2D landmarks. Here, we show that this similarity was an artifact of multiple errors, including the use of a dataset of extant cetaceans that does not match the morphology of respective species. Notably, 15 of the cetacean species examined were represented by narrow skulls reminiscent of Hupehsuchus; without these unrealistic data points, Hupehsuchus has no morphospace…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPaleontology and Evolutionary Biology · Morphological variations and asymmetry · Evolution and Paleontology Studies
