Polesinesuchus is an extinctgenus of stagonolepididaetosaur known from the Late Triassic of southern Brazil. Fossils have been found from the Santa Maria Supersequence of the late Carnian and early Norian stages, making Polesinesuchus one of the oldest aetosaurs. It contains a single species, Polesinesuchus aurelioi, the fifth aetosaur species known from South America to date.[1] Anatomical evidence suggests that Polesinesuchus likely represents a juvenile individual of the contemporary Aetosauroides.[2][3]
Polesinesuchus is known from a relatively small-sized individual with an estimated length of 76 centimetres (30 in), probably a two-year-old juvenile based on the incomplete fusion of neural arches to their centra in the whole vertebral column.[2]Polesinesuchus can be distinguished from all other aetosaurs by a unique combination of characters not controlled by ontogeny, most of which are found in its vertebrae. Its cervical vertebrae show prezygapophyses that widely extend laterally through most of the anterior edge of the diapophyses. In Polesinesuchus, hyposphene articulations are absent in both cervical and mid-dorsal vertebrae. A ventral keel is present in the cervical vertebrae. The centra of the anterior and mid-dorsal vertebrae lack a lateral fossa. The proximal end of the scapula is greatly expanded, while the medial portion of scapular blade is expanded anteroposteriorly. Polesinesuchus possess a short humerus with a robust shaft, and a dorsoventral and very low iliac blade with a long anterior process, exceeding slightly the pubic peduncle.[1] Yet, in 2021, it was found that many of these features fall within the range of variation present in juvenile specimens of Aetosauroides. One example is the lateral fossa, which becomes more apparent in individuals of Aetosauroides longer than 1 metre (3 ft 3 in)).[2] Furthermore, a braincase of Aetosauroides had a remarkably similar structure of the basioccipital bone to Polesinesuchus.[3] For these reasons, Polesinesuchus was suggested as a junior synonym of Aetosauroides.[2]
Classification
A phylogenetic analysis was conducted in the first description of Polesinesuchus based on a slightly updated data matrix from previous analyses, resulting in a matrix that includes 19 aetosaurs and two outgroup taxa which are scored based on 37 morphological traits. Polesinesuchus was recovered as the sister taxon of Aetobarbakinoides, known from the same geological formation. Close relatives of this clade included Aetosauroides and Neoaetosauroides, both of which are also from South America. However, Aetosaurinae is found to be paraphyletic representing a grade of early aetosaurs that developed into desmatosuchines and typothoracisines later in the Triassic. Although this clade is placed in a relatively basalphylogenetic position among stagonolepidid aetosaurs, it is closely related to both desmatosuchines and typothoracisines, two derived clades of stagonolepidids. Below is a cladogram modified from this analysis.[1]
^ abcdPaes-Neto, V.D.; Desojo, J.B.; Brust, A.C.B.; Schultz, C.L.; Da-Rosa, A.A.S.; Soares, M.B. (2021). "Intraspecific variation in the axial skeleton of Aetosauroides scagliai (Archosauria: Aetosauria) and its implications for the aetosaur diversity of the Late Triassic of Brazil". Annals of the Brazilian Academy of Sciences. 93 (supp. 2): e20201239. doi:10.1590/0001-3765202120201239. hdl:11336/150258. PMID34468486. S2CID237372648.
^ abPaes-Neto, V.D.; Desojo, J.B.; Brust, A.C.B.; Ribeiro, A.M.; Schultz, C.L.; Soares, M.B. (2021). "The first braincase of the basal aetosaur Aetosauroides scagliai (Archosauria: Pseudosuchia) from the Upper Triassic of Brazil". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 41 (2): e1928681. doi:10.1080/02724634.2021.1928681. S2CID237518035.