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With six years of tedious phd work on theropod dinosaurs behind him, Darren Naish stares longingly from his office window at the birds outside and wonders: why did I bother? He pursues exotic lizards and feral cats across the British countryside, occasionally prizes the skeletal jaws from hedgehog corpses, and aims to publish his technical work on obscure Cretaceous dinosaurs. He remains desperately in quest of an academic job that'll last more than a month, and - with a background in TV research, e-learning development, academic editing, popular writing, teaching, landscape gardening, parenting and the wonderful world of retail - he still holds out hope of becoming a dedicated academic. He can be contacted intermittently at eotyrannus (at) gmail dot com. For more biographical info go here.

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« At last, the rhinogradentians (part I) | Main | Your Triassic armadillodiles »

When snouters attack (or... rhinogradentians part II)

Category: mammalogy
Posted on: April 1, 2007 12:40 PM, by Darren Naish

snouter%20skeleton.jpg

In the previous post we looked at the diversity of the rhinogradentians (aka rhinogrades or snouters) belonging to the so-called monorrhinan or uni-snouter division, and we also started to go through the asclerorrhinan or soft-nosed snouter division. Here, in the second post on this much-discussed and highly popular subject, we finish our tour of asclerorrhinans before going on to look at the last and most anatomically complex group, the polyrrhinans or multi-snouters. We finish by looking at the modern-day renaissance in rhinogradentian research: an endeavour which has resulting in the scarcely believable discovery of living relict species. Needless to say, the previous post is required reading before you tackle this one...

Conventionally regarded as the most recently evolved of the soft-nosed snouters were the snout leapers, and in the previous post we looked at the diverse arboreal and terrestrial members of this clade. Primitively quadrupedal, and with a jointed nasarium that functioned as a spring-action pseudo-limb, they also included the short-bodied true snout leapers or hopsorrhinids, a group where hindlimbs were absent.

earwing.jpg

The best known and most studied snout leaper - and indeed one of the best known and most studied of all rhinogradentians - was the Earwing Otopteryx volitans [skeleton shown above: sketch of live animal shown in adjacent image]. While conventionally awarded its own 'family' it was more likely a derived hopsorrhinid as it certainly possessed all the derived peculiarities of this group. When terrestrial hopsorrhinids leapt, they were sometimes observed using their large ears to help steer their progression. This perhaps gives us a clue as to how the flight ability of Otopteryx evolved, as this remarkable rhinogradentian used its enormous wing-like ears to fly with. The enormous aural cartilages and their hypertrophied muscles - particularly the m. aeroplano-jugalauris - allowed Otopteryx to flap its ears in rapid, skillfull flight and it was even able to avoid avian predators on the archipelago (Stumpke 1967). Jurassic specimens of Otopteryx were reported from France in 1995 [see image below: from here] and are so similar to the Hi-yi-yi population that they were initially referred to the same species. This is possible of course but would be unprecedented for a mammal, and the possibility remains that the fossil should be named as a distinct taxon.

fossil%20Otopteryx.JPG

Finally among the snout leapers, there were the specialised orchidiopsids or orchidsnouters. Indeed these rhinogradentians are so unusual that their classification among the snout leapers was initially not suspected. Entirely arboreal, they lacked hindlimbs and hence probably descended from hopsorrhinids (in fact, it is probably accurate to regard them as part of Hopsorrhinidae, rather than as a separate 'family'), but unlike hopsorrhinids, they possessed a large, flattened rhinarium that resembled a leaf or petal. The large ears were also petal-like. Standing vertically on their powerful tail, and climbing slowly with their prehensile hands, they mimicked leaves and flowers and preyed on insects. At least one species, the Glowing lily snouter Liliopsis thaumatonasus, was bioluminescent: this apparently being due to symbiotic bacteria.

Polyrhiny - the condition in which the nasarium is divided into several or multiple snouts - was unique among rhinogradentians to the polyrrhinans, or multi-snouters. These are the most familiar of rhinogradentians, but they are also the most mysterious, as their origins remain obscure and they so differed from other rhinogradentians in so many details that they are generally thought to have diverged as early as the Cretaceous (Stumpke 1967). This has been validated by the discovery of hopsorrhinids in the Jurassic as just mentioned.

Tyrann.gif

Polyrrhinans were divided by Stumpke into the tetrarrhinidans (four-snouters), hexarrhinidans (six-snouters) and dolichoproatans (tasselsnouters). Tetrarrhinidans include the well-studied snout walkers or nasobemes and the amazing Predacious snouter Tyrannonasus imperator [in adjacent image, a Predacious snouter is attacking a Nasobema. Image originally from Stumpke 1967 but taken from reproduction here]. The frugivorous nasobemes were able to walk on their four long snouts thanks to an internal skeleton of corpora spongiosa and a hydraulic system that provided turgidity when needed. The tail of these animals was equally unusual: it was distally hollow and boneless and connected to the caecum. By forcing intestinal gas into the tail, nasobemes were able to shoot out the ribbon-like tail for a distance of up to 3 m (this in a rhinogradentian with a rhinarium and body length of about 1 m: they were among the largest members of the group). Tyrannonasus preyed upon nasobemes, capturing them following pursuit on-nose and killing them with a poisonous tail spike. Various characters of the digestive tract indicate that Tyrannonasus evolved from frugivorous species and it has even been proposed that its predatory lifestyle developed from an original habit of stealing fruit from nasobemes, this piracy developing over time into predation.

Among the most specialised rhinogradentians, the hexarrhinidans (six-snouters) include the ribbon snouters, six-flowered snouters and flower-faced snouters. Ribbon snouters (Eledonopsis) lived in burrows and were shrew-like, but for the ribbon-like snouts that extended along the ground, some distance (up to c. 30 cm) away from the burrow. A ciliated epithelium extended along the entire dorsal surface of each snout, and small insects that became stuck here were carried by the cilia toward the mouth. Six-flowered snouters (Hexanthus) presumably descended from Eledonopsis-like forms but, instead of long ribbons, their proboscides took the form of long tubes, each sprouting a flower-like tip that the animal would wind about the stems of adjacent plants. Flying insects, deceived by these flower-like structures, would settle on them and be caught, and then moved by peristalsis along the tubes.

An apparent deviation from the cryptic lifestyle of other hexarrhinidans was adopted by flower-faced snouters (Cephalanthus). Equipped with petal-like fleshy growths surrounding the mouth, the best known members of this group remained sessile as remarkable flower-mimics. While young Cephalanthus had a 'normal' mammalian tail, in adults it was a long, stiff structure rooted in the ground. After birth, a young Cephalanthus would climb to the top of a tall flower, bite off the flower head, and then take up life as a flower-mimic, an exudate from the mouth attracting flying insects. The sessile attraction of insects, aided by oral exudates, may not be unique to rhinogradentians among tetrapods, as it has been suggested that frogmouths may also employ this technique (Diamond 1985). As discussed in my previous article on flightless future bats, Cephalanthus is also strikingly similar to the sedentary Flooer Florifacies mirabila of the Batavian forests (Dixon 1981).

snouters.jpg

While some of the polyrrhinans, such as the nasobemes and Predacious snouter, were quite large, they are dwarfed by the Bearlike shaggyfaced snouter Mamontops ursulus [shown in adjacent image], a herbivorous six-snouted species that attained a vertical height of 1.2 m in the males. Equipped with a thick woolly coat and short limbs that were well tucked-in to the pelage, it was a highland specialist that lived in small herds. Tasselsnouters, the dolichoproatans, were also large and possessed the most elaborate nasarial morphology of any rhinogradentian, with a ridiculous 18 snout pairs.

When Stumpke 1967 was published, rhinogradentians were regarded as unique to the Hi-yi-yi archipelago. As discussed earlier however, Jurassic fossils show that snout leapers - members of an apparently derived (and thus comparatively young) rhinogradentian clade - were formerly present in what is now continental Europe, suggesting that rhinogradentians were originally of very wide distribution. Several even more exciting recent discoveries have shown, amazingly, that relict rhinogradentians have survived to the present in various Old World locations. In 1999 a live rhinogradentian was discovered in Slovenia. Representing a new taxon, Acrorrhinos, it appears to be particularly archaic and closely related to Haeckel's primitive snouter [image below from here: this site also provides an account of this taxon's discovery].

Dolichonase.jpg

In 2004, a new, extant colonial rhinogradentian was discovered (Kashkina 2004), and later in the same year it was realised that various hermit crab parasites were also highly modified, tiny parasitic rhinogradentians (Bukashkina 2004). As discussed in the previous post, it was remarkable enough that the tiny turbellarian-like allsnouters were originally mistaken for invertebrates but, as ridiculous as it sounds, we now know of two rhinogradentian lineages that diverged from the mammalian body plan to such an unprecedented degree. It's well known that a parasitic or infaunal lifestyle can lead to an overall simplification in form and function, and these incredible tiny boneless mammals provide what might be the best example of this in the whole of zoology.

Given that very little rhinogradentian material exists in collections, many species are only known from field sketches. Several workers have attempted in recent years to reconstruct some of the species three-dimensionally: Japanese model-maker Takeshi Tokiwa has produced models of many species (viewable here), as has Michaela Fortuber of the Naturhistorisches Museum at Braunschweig, Germany. Naturally, rhinogradentians have made many apperances in the technical literature and their affinities and origins continue to be debated. It remains tragic that the vast majority of species are now extinct, especially when they were such unique, remarkable creatures.

I'd like to thank everyone who has supported my academic interest in rhinogradentians over the years (particularly Dr Vector), and to all my readers for being so patient in waiting for these articles to appear. Rhinogradentians have been mentioned here at Tetrapod Zoology for some considerable time now (check the archives) and, despite requests that I should keep making the promises but perpetually fail to publish the promised articles, I always planned to deliver. At last, my work is done.

Refs - -

Bukashkina, V. V. 2004. New parasitic species of colonial Rhinogradentia. Russian Journal of Marine Biology 30, 150.

Diamond, J. 1985. Filter-feeding on a grand scale. Nature 316, 679-680.

Dixon, D. 1981. After Man: A Zoology of the Future. Granada, London.

Kashkina, M. I. 2004. Dendronasus sp. - a new member of the order nose-walkers (Rhinogradentia). Biol. Morya 30 (2).

Stumpke, H. 1967. The Snouters: Form and Life of the Rhinogrades. The Natural History Press, Garden City, New York.

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Comments

I'd be interested in any comments you might have regarding how mome raths* are related to the snouters. While they are clearly not themselves snouters, the similarity is striking.

*Carroll, L. 1872. Through the Looking Glass, Macmillan, London.

Posted by: Kevin W. Parker | April 1, 2007 2:20 PM

Next year reproduction of Ascentus lateralis?

Posted by: sparc | April 1, 2007 4:26 PM

This is one of the most elaborate April Fool's jokes I've ever seen.

Well done!

Posted by: Jeb, FCD | April 1, 2007 5:18 PM

The "Spinal Tap" of Zoology!

Posted by: Jonathan Vos Post | April 1, 2007 5:41 PM

It should be noted that the greater tragedy that resulted from the destruction of the Hi-Iay archipelago was the release of one rather destructive specimen of Megamegamegalosaurus godzillae. Rare and historically accurate films have been made of that tragic event, but have been supressed by Japanese censors. Only the fictionalized versions have been released to the public.

Posted by: natural cynic | April 1, 2007 6:23 PM

Great. Temnospondyls next! :o)

Posted by: David Marjanović | April 1, 2007 11:04 PM

In 1999 a live rhinogradentian was discovered in Slovenia.

Damn. I didn't get to Slovenia until 2003....

Posted by: RM1(SS) (ret) | April 2, 2007 3:30 AM

Is it certain that the Rhinogradentia are a monophyletic group? Due to the sketchy nature of the available descriptions, it seems possible that their classification has been based on superficial resemblances. This can be hazardous, even when the animals display highly unusual morphologies: convergence is all over the place. Consider the American species Condylura cristata: if known only from a description and depiction similar to those in Stumke's monograph, it might well be taken for a Rhinogradentian (perhaps a basal Tassel-snouter?). But Condylura is a well-attested member of a Boreoeutherrian clade, the crown group of the Eulipotyphla. And surely the monophyly of the Eulipotyphla is beyond all POSSIBLE... oh, never mind!

Posted by: Allen Hazen | April 2, 2007 3:35 AM

I hope you'll keep us updated on future developments in our knowledge of the remarkable Rhinogradentians.

It seems, though, that some of the less well-informed have seized on the coincidence of your posting this on April 1 and seem to think this is a joke, while the discovery of the diverse fauna (and flora) of the Hi-yi-yi Archipelago and their subsequent demise at man's hand (or finger) is one of the triumphs and tragedies of 20th Century zoology.

Posted by: Mike | April 2, 2007 4:59 AM

What a cool skelet... wait a second... mammals don't have ossified external ears! It's a fake! ;)

Posted by: Mickey Mortimer | April 2, 2007 11:09 AM

It seems, though, that some of the less well-informed have seized on the coincidence of your posting this on April 1 and seem to think this is a joke

Agreed. I'd like to direct the doubters to Amazon, where reprints of Stumpke's monograph are still available for as little as 7.21 USD. Don't miss the chance to own this piece of zoological history!

Posted by: Dr Vector | April 2, 2007 11:13 AM

What a cool skelet... wait a second... mammals don't have ossified external ears! It's a fake! ;)

Sigh, you obviously haven't read Stumpke 1967, have you? Those are the auricular cartilages, a well known autapomorphy of Otopteryx. Read the technical literature before making such ill-informed comments, pleeeeeeeeeeease!

Posted by: Dr Beano Grosswanger | April 2, 2007 11:20 AM

Any level 23 ubergeeks may recollect that Tyrannonasus imperator has been published on in the fantasy as well as the scientific literature-- at least I recall that the greatest roleplaying game ever, Runequest, had a "nasobeme" monster that had the latin name of T. imperator, and fit the description of said beastie. It was kinda wimpy.
/ubergeek powers, deactivated... temporarily/

Posted by: John H | April 2, 2007 11:52 AM

I'd like to direct the doubters to Amazon, where reprints of Stumpke's monograph are still available for as little as 7.21 USD.

...or, if you're willing to spend twice as much, there are lots of used copies out there in various conditions -- check out the listing at abebooks.com, for example.

Posted by: dinogami | April 2, 2007 8:17 PM

Don't forget the case of "Eoornis pterovelox gobiensis" by Augustus C. Fortheringham. Along the same lines, published in 1928. This is a parody of the AMNH's Gobi expeditions. The authors used a car hood ornament as the subject. A facsimile of original edition is back in print from Euston Grove Press, at my request.

Posted by: Joe Cain | July 5, 2007 2:44 AM

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