Luskhan (meaning "water spirit chief") is an extinctgenus of brachaucheninepliosaur from the Cretaceous of Russia. The type and only species is Luskhan itilensis, named by Valentin Fischer and colleagues in 2017 from a well-preserved and nearly complete skeleton. As an early-diverging brachauchenine, Luskhan consequently exhibits an intermediate combination of traits seen in more basal (less specialized) and more derived (more specialized) pliosaurs. However, Luskhan departs significantly from other pliosaurs in that it exhibits a lack of adaptations in its skull to feeding on large prey; its slender snout, small teeth, and short tooth rows instead indicate a skull adapted for feeding on small, soft prey. With these features, it is the pliosaur that approaches closest to the distantly-related piscivorouspolycotylids, having convergently evolved these traits more than 10 million years apart.
Discovery and naming
A nearly complete fossil skeleton of a pliosaur, preserved in three dimensions, was found by Gleb N. Uspensky in 2002 on the eastern bank of the Volga River, 3 kilometres (1.9 mi) north of the village of Slantsevy Rudnik in the Ulyanovsk region of western Russia. Deposits in the region consist of dark grey and slightly sandyshale layers and siltite layers, in which carbonatenodules are embedded. The skeleton was found in the g-5 horizon (layer).[1] After its discovery, the specimen was stored in the I.A. Goncharov Ulyanovsk Regional Museum of Local Lore (YKM), under the specimen number YKM 68344/1_262.[2]
Uspensky co-authored a research paper describing YKM 68344/1_262 that was published in the journal Current Biology on June 5, 2017. Other authors were Valentin Fischer, Roger Benson, Nikolay Zverkov, Laura Soul, Maxim Arkhangelsky, Olivier Lambert, Ilya Stenshin, and Patrick Druckenmiller. They named the specimen as a new genus and species, Luskhan itilensis. The genus name, Luskhan, is derived from luuses, spirits and masters of water in Mongolian and Turkic mythology, plus the suffix khan, meaning "chief". Itil is the ancient Turkic name for the Volga River, hence the species epithet itilensis means "of the Volga River".[2]
Description
The holotype of Luskhan measures 6.5 m (21 ft) long. At the end of a relatively short neck, the long skull tapers to an elongate snout, which is longer than the region of the skull behind the eyes, as in other members of the Brachaucheninae. It has a lower jaw 1.59 m (5.2 ft) long. Additional characteristics typical of brachauchenines include the parietal bone extending forward to the position of the nostrils; the snout being unconstricted, but bearing an expansion on the bottom surface like Megacephalosaurus; the retroarticular process at the back of the lower jaw being inturned; the teeth in the upper jaw being equally-sized; the facets that articulate with the cervical ribs on the cervical vertebrae being placed relatively high, similar to Kronosaurus and Brachauchenius but unlike Jurassicpliosaurs and other plesiosaurs; the transverse processes attaching to the dorsal vertebrae above the level of the neural canals; and the long coracoid measuring 2.3 times the length of the scapula (2.5 in Kronosaurus).[2][3][4][5]
Luskhan also exhibits some more "primitive" traits which resemble non-brachauchenine thalassophoneans, consistent with it being among the earliest brachauchenines. Like Pliosaurus, the squamosal bones overlap the rear processes of the jugal bones;[6] it also excludes them, as in most plesiosaurs, from the border of the temporal fenestrae. There is also a bulb on each squamosal, as well as a ridge extending upwards from the rear surface. As in Pliosaurus westburyensis, the processes of the pterygoid bones that articulate with the quadrate bone are thick, and there is a U-shaped notch on the bottom of the supraoccipital bone. The flanges on the bottom of the pterygoids come into contact with each other at the midline of the skull. On the bottom of the cervicals, there are large foramina, or pits. The number of cervical vertebrae in Luskhan (14) can be seen as intermediate between Pliosaurus (18)[7] and Brachauchenius (12).[2][8]
Unusually, Luskhan also lacks many of the adaptations for hunting large prey seen in other brachauchenines: the snout is very thin; there is no keel on the bottom of the fused symphysis of the lower jaw; there is no diastema (or gap in the tooth row); the bones of the upper jaw (the premaxilla and maxilla) are expanded outwards; and there are no caniniform ("canine-like") teeth. The length of the symphysis as a proportion of the overall length of the lower jaw (34%) is also longer than brachauchenines and thalassophoneans, but instead is within the range of the symphyses of the distantly-related Polycotylidae. Also like polycotylids,[9] the teeth are more widely spaced and terminate further forward on the jaw, below the midpoint of the eye socket. As in Dolichorhynchops,[10] the arch of the squamosal is angled further forwards than thalassophoneans.[2]
Autapomorphies
A number of unique characters, or autapomorphies, set Luskhan apart from all other plesiosaurs. Among thalassophoneans, Luskhan is unique for having seven teeth in the premaxilla. The first of these is procumbent (angled forwards) such that it is nearly horizontal, and the space between it and the subsequent tooth is also widened. A roughened, hook-like projection develops on the squamosal from its suture with the quadrate. At the back of the skull, the exoccipital bones enclose the bottom of the foramen magnum, thereby excluding the basioccipital bone. The plate-like lamellae of the pterygoids bear deep grooves on their outer surfaces. On the atlas (the first cervical), the intercentrum is swollen and has a ridge underneath; meanwhile, the bottom of the axis (the second cervical) is covered by a tongue-like projection from the third cervical.[2]
In the shoulder girdle, the projection at the front of the coracoid that points forwards in other plesiosaurs is instead pointed downwards in Luskhan, such that it is perpendicular to the rest of the bone. Unlike other thalassophoneans, but like the Elasmosauridae,[11] the blade of the scapula is relatively short, being only as tall vertically as the longitudinal distance from its base to the articulation with the coracoid. On the humerus, the humeral tuberosity is located above the expansion of the capitulum at the bottom end. The ulna and radius of the front flippers are very small, being only about the same size as the tarsus of the hind flippers; the former of these is longer. Unlike all other pliosaurids, there is no opening (epipodial foramen) where the two bones meet. The fibula is much longer than the tibia; the intermedium of the tarsus contacts only the fibula, and lacks an articulation for the tibia unlike other thalassophoneans and Marmornectes.[2]
Classification
The following cladogram follows an analysis by Fischer and colleagues in 2017, based on a dataset published by Benson and Druckenmiller in 2014[3] that was previously modified for the description of Makhaira in 2015.[12] Due to the completeness of Luskhan, its position is based on scorings for 74% of the characteristics listed in the dataset. In the strict consensus of the 20,000 most parsimoniousphylogenetic trees recovered, Makhaira forms a polytomy with Pliosaurus species, instead of forming a clade with other brachauchenines; however, in the consensus of the 24 most parsimonious trees, it is the most basal brachauchenine, with Luskhan being the next most basal brachauchenine.[2]
Along with Makhaira and Stenorhynchosaurus, Luskhan forms an evolutionary grade that fills a critical gap of 40 million years - from the Berriasian to the Barremian epochs of the Early Cretaceous - in the evolution of brachauchenines.[2] While María Páramo-Fonseca and colleagues, the describers of Stenorhynchosaurus, indicated that including it in the Brachaucheninae would necessitate a re-definition of the clade,[4] Fischer and colleagues did not see this as necessary.[2]
Paleobiology
Most thalassophonean pliosaurids, with their robust skulls and short necks, were well-adapted to apex predatorniches.[3][6][13] Although serrated teeth, spatula-shaped snouts, and strongly-developed crests on the skull roof were lost in brachauchenines,[5][8][14][15] their large size and teeth still indicate predatory lifestyles. Meanwhile, with their slimmer body proportions, polycotylids were likely fast-swimming piscivores.[10][16]Principal component and ecomorphological analyses place Luskhan as being significantly closer to polycotylids than other thalassophoneans in terms of skull traits, but not in terms of the rest of the body; thus, Luskhan is the most polycotylid-like pliosaurid. The early thalassophonean Peloneustes is also polycotylid-like, but less so than Luskhan.[2]
Ecologically speaking, Luskhan probably preyed on small, soft animals. This is suggested by the slender snout, the long symphysis, and the relatively short tooth row compared to other thalassophoneans. A few traits in Luskhan are shared with typical thalassophoneans, such as the presence of serrations in the rearmost teeth and the presence of weakly trihedral (triangular in cross-section) teeth; however, these are probably vestigial traits retained from Pliosaurus-like ancestors.[12] Thus, Luskhan departed from the typical apex predator niche of thalassophoneans in order to colonize a lower trophic level, having done so independently 10 million years after polycotylids. Makhaira, by contrast, retained a bauplan that is better-suited to being an apex predator; for instance, its teeth are larger than Luskhan.[2][12]
^Massare, J.A. (1987). "Tooth Morphology and Prey Preference of Mesozoic Marine Reptiles". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 7 (2): 121–137. doi:10.1080/02724634.1987.10011647.
^Schumacher, B.A.; Carpenter, K.; Everhart, M.J. (2013). "A new Cretaceous Pliosaurid (Reptilia, Plesiosauria) from the Carlile Shale (middle Turonian) of Russell County, Kansas". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 33 (3): 613–628. doi:10.1080/02724634.2013.722576. S2CID130165209.
^Adams, D.A. (1997). "Trinacromerum bonneri, new species, last and fastest pliosaur of the Western Interior Seaway". Texas Journal of Science. 49 (3): 179–198.
^Berezin, A.Y. (2011). "A new plesiosaur of the family Aristonectidae from the early cretaceous of the center of the Russian platform". Paleontological Journal. 45 (6): 648–660. doi:10.1134/S0031030111060037. S2CID129045087.
^Arkhangelsky, M.S.; Averianov, A.O. (2003). "On the Find of a Primitive Hadrosauroid Dinosaur (Ornithischia, Hadrosauroidea) in the Cretaceous of the Belgorod Region". Paleontological Journal. 37 (1): 60–63.
^Blagovetshenskiy, I.V.; Shumilkin, I.A. (2006). "Gastropod mollusks from the Hauterivian of Ulyanovsk (Volga Region): 2. Genera Khetella Beisel, 1977 and Cretadmete gen. nov". Paleontological Journal. 40 (2): 143–149. doi:10.1134/S0031030106020043. S2CID83736583.
^Golovinova, M.A.; Guzhov, A.V. (2009). "Early Cretaceous gastropods of the Middle-Lower Volga river region from P.A. Gerasimov's collection". Paleontological Journal. 43 (5): 506–513. doi:10.1134/S0031030109050050. S2CID128624041.