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10 June 2017 Shedding Light on the Taxonomic Diversity of the South American Miocene Caimans: The Status of Melanosuchus fisheri (Crocodylia, Alligatoroidea)
Paula Bona, M. Victoria Fernandez Blanco, Torsten M. Schever, Christian Both
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Abstract

Melanosuchus niger Spix is distributed throughout the Amazon River basin today. The extinct Melanosuchus fisheri Medina from the late Miocene of Venezuela was erected based on two almost complete, but heavily deformed skulls (the holotype MCNC 243 and the referred specimen MCZ 4336), which show morphological differences from each other. The comparison indicates that only the holotype can be referred to Melanosuchus Gray. We propose MCZ 4336 is a representative of the caimanine Globidentosuchus brachyrostris Scheyer, Aguilera, Delfino, Fortier, Carlini, Sánchez, Carrillo-Briceño, Quiroz and Sãnchez-Villagra. Although the taxonomy of M. fisheri is taken into question herein, the classification of the holotype still sustains the hypothesis that the genus is registered in South America since the late Miocene.

Paula Bona, M. Victoria Fernandez Blanco, Torsten M. Schever, and Christian Both "Shedding Light on the Taxonomic Diversity of the South American Miocene Caimans: The Status of Melanosuchus fisheri (Crocodylia, Alligatoroidea)," Ameghiniana 54(6), 681-687, (10 June 2017). https://doi.org/10.5710/AMGH.08.06.2017.3103
Received: 21 March 2017; Accepted: 1 June 2017; Published: 10 June 2017
KEYWORDS
Amazonia
América del Sur
black caiman
Caiman negro
Caimanes
Caimaninae
Caimans
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