The specimen was first mentioned in a 2019 abstract.[2] In 2023, Nesbittet al. describedMambachiton fiandohana as a new genus and species of avemetatarsalian archosaurs based on these fossil remains. The generic name, "Mambachiton", combines the Swahili word "mamba", meaning "crocodile" with the Ancient Greek "khiton" ("χιτών"), meaning "a suit of armour". The name also references chiton molluscs, as the armour of Mambachiton superficially resembles that of polyplacophorans. The specific name, "fiandohana", is derived from a Malagasy word meaning "source" or "beginning", as Mambachiton is phylogenetically close to the crocodile-bird split.[1]
Description
Mambachiton was a similar size to the Tanzanian aphanosaurTeleocrater, which was about 7–10 feet (2.1–3.0 m) in body length.[3] Osteoderms were found articulated with the fossilized vertebrae of Mambachiton, including three pairs of osteoderms above each cervical vertebra.[1]
Classification
Nesbitt et al. (2023) recovered Mambachiton as the earliest diverging member of Avemetatarsalia. They specifically noted that it lacks multiple characters of the minimally inclusive clade containing aphanosaurs and ornithodirans, and is thus nested outside of that clade. Preliminary analyses considered Mambachiton to be a basalpoposauroid (a clade of pseudosuchians), though the later recognition of aphanosaurs as early-diverging avemetatarsalians corrected this view. The results of the phylogenetic analyses of Nesbit et al. (2023) are shown in the cladogram below:[1]
^Fortuny, Josep; Arbez, Thomas; Mujal, Eudald; Steyer, J. Sébastien (2019-01-02). "Reappraisal of 'Metoposaurus hoffmani' Dutuit, 1978, and description of new temnospondyl specimens from the Middle–Late Triassic of Madagascar (Morondava Basin)". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 39 (1): e1576701. doi:10.1080/02724634.2019.1576701. ISSN0272-4634. S2CID146075668.