古代オーストラリアの「ドロップクロコダイル」の化石を発見(Scientists unearth Australia’s ancient ‘drop crocs’)

2025-11-11 ニューサウスウェールズ大学(UNSW)

UNSWの研究チームは、クイーンズランド州ムーゴンで約5,500万年前のワニ類「メコスクイナ(Mekosuchinae)」の卵殻化石を発見し、オーストラリア最古のワニ卵であることを明らかにした。微細構造と化学分析から、この絶滅ワニは湖畔で巣を作り繁殖していた可能性が高い。また、同時代の証拠から、一部個体は水辺に限定されず森林環境を利用し、木上から獲物へ飛びかかる“ドロップ・クロック”の行動様式を持っていた可能性も示された。発見された卵殻は骨や歯より保存性が高く、古代ワニの生態や繁殖戦略を復元する重要資料とされる。本研究は、ゴンドワナ期の生態系やワニ類進化の理解を大きく前進させる成果となった。

古代オーストラリアの「ドロップクロコダイル」の化石を発見(Scientists unearth Australia’s ancient ‘drop crocs’)
Artistic reconstruction of a female mekosuchine nesting in the swampy environments of the Murgon fossil site. Also shown is one of the abundant giant soft-shell turtles, Murgonomys braithwaitei, an archaic marsupial, Djarthia murgonensis, and an unnamed ancestral song-bird. The clays that form the fossil deposit were accumulated in this ancient lake.Image: Panades et al 2025 (generated with Gemini AI)

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オーストラリア最古のワニの卵殻:メコスチヌスの生殖古生態に関する知見 Australia’s oldest crocodylian eggshell: insights into the reproductive paleoecology of mekosuchines

Xavier Panadès I Blas,Àngel Galobart,Michael Archer,Michael Stein,Suzanne Hand & Albert Sellés
Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology   Published:11 Nov 2025
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/02724634.2025.2560010

ABSTRACT

Alongside large madtsoiid snakes, the largest known lizards, thylacoleonid marsupials and a range of other terrestrial carnivores, the now extinct mekosuchine crocodylians were significant predators during most of the Cenozoic in Australia. Although the skeletal fossil record for mekosuchines extends from the lower Eocene through the Quaternary, fossil evidence relating to their reproductive biology (e.g., eggshells, eggs, clutches, or nests) has been reported but not studied. Here, we describe Australia’s oldest crocodylian eggshell from the purple layer of the lower Eocene Tingamarra Local Fauna of the Oakdale Sandstone of Murgon, south-eastern Queensland, Australia. The eggshells belong to a new crocodylian eggshell type which differs structurally from all other crocodylomorph eggshells. Given the abundance in the Tingamarra deposits of specimens representing two mekosuchine crocodylians, both referable to species of Kambara and with no other crocodylians being present in this deposit, it is parsimonious to presume that these eggshells were produced by one or both of these mekosuchine species. A preliminary taphonomic analysis of the oological remains sheds light on aspects of the reproductive behavior of these mekosuchines.

1700応用理学一般
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