Rhineceps was originally discovered in the “Upper Bone Beds” of the Chiweta Beds, North Waller Area in Northern Malawi.[5][6] The fossil was first described and named by Haughton in 1926, whereby he described the fossil of a left mandibular ramus of R. nyasaensis as within the genusRhinesuchus due to its similarity with the fossils of Rhinesuchus whaitsi.[6] Watson later determined in a letter to Parrington that the original fossil was actually the anterior end of a right ramus and not a left ramus.[5] Watson in 1962 described fossils newly found from the same locality collected by Parrington as fossils of R. nyasaensis and determined they were from the same individual.[5] Watson also placed R. nyasaensis as part of a new genusRhineceps that is distinct from other Rhinesuchus species.[5]
The presence of the types of gills in temnospondyls has largely been difficult to determine because conflicting interpretation of osteological evidence. Phylogenetic information has also created uncertainty of where external gills evolved and internal gills were lost.[10] The evolutionary explanation for this contradiction known as Bystrow's Paradox is that temnospondyls had both internal gills and external gills, with external gills only present in larvae and internal gills that are homologous with Osteichthyes (bony fish) gills that later become modern amphibian gills.[10] Thus, Rhineceps larvae likely had external gills and adult Rhineceps had internal gills, although this is difficult to confirm given the lack of evidence for metamorphosis in stereospondyls including Rhineceps.
Rhineceps as a temnospondyl, possesses diagnostic temnospondyl traits including wide vomers, large and round interpterygoid vacuities, otic notches, contact between post-pareital and exoccipital skull bones, and a stapes that articulates with the parasphenoid.[11]Rhineceps fossils are differentiated from other rhinesuchids by the following traits “presence of a vomerine depression immediately anterior to cultriform process of the parasphenoid; ectopterygoids with enlarged tusks at their anterior end; transverse vomerine tooth row anteriorly convex; quadrate condyles projected behind the tip of the tabular horns; vomers with a continuous raised field of denticles; parasphenoid plate wider than long; well-developed transversely wide ‘pockets’; internarial vacuity between nasals and premaxillae; mandible with two anterior meckelian foraminae; chordatympanic foramen located on the suture between the articular and the prearticular.”.[1]
Geological and paleoenvironmental information
Rhineceps was found in the South African Karoo Supergroup, a group of sedimentary rocks that span from the Carboniferous period to the Jurassic period. These sedimentary layers were created from sediment shed from lakes and rivers near the Gondwanide mountains on the continent of Gondwana.[12]Rhineceps was found in the “Upper Bone Beds” of the Chiweta beds in the North Waller Area in Northern Malawi, which is in South Central Africa.[6] The sedimentary rocks from the Chiweta beds originated from mostly river sediments which often contain fossil bones surrounded by pedogenic carbonates.[12] The lacustrine (lake derived) sediment does not contain bone, but instead contains pollen that were used to identify the age range of the Chiweta beds to be less than 263 Mya.[12] The overlap of stratigraphic ranges of specific therapsidtaxa place the Cistecephalus Assemblage Zone in the Chiweta beds (the zone where Rhineceps was found) within 256-258 Mya.[12]
^ abcdefMariscano, C.A.; Latimer, E.; Rubidge, B.; Smith, R.M.H. (2017). "The Rhinesuchidae and early history of the Stereospondyli (Amphibia: Temnospondyli) at the end of the Palaeozoic". Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. 181 (2): 357–384. doi:10.1093/zoolinnean/zlw032. hdl:11336/105150.
^ abcdefMcHugh, Julia (2012). Temnospondyl ontogeny and phylogeny, a window into terrestrial ecosystems during the Permian-Triassic mass extinction (PhD thesis). The University of Iowa. ProQuest1030963218.
^Rainer R. Schoch. 2013. The evolution of major temnospondyl clades: an inclusive phylogenetic analysis, Journal of Systematic Palaeontology, 11:6, 673-705, DOI: 10.1080/14772019.2012.699006