- Source: Plastomeninae
Plastomeninae is an extinct subfamily of softshell turtles that inhabited most of North America from the Cretaceous to the Eocene. Members of this subfamily are also known as plastomenines.
Taxonomy and evolution
They are thought to have originated in North America during or shortly before the Campanian from basal trionychids that dispersed from Asia. They reached their peak diversity from the Maastrichtian through the Paleocene, having survived the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event. However, they went entirely extinct by the Lutetian. The last surviving member of this subfamily is thought to have been Plastomenus thomasii, which is the only known member of the subfamily to have survived past the Paleocene into the Eocene.
Morphological analysis supports them being the sister taxon to the flapshell turtles (subfamily Cyclanorbinae), which still survive to the present day in parts of tropical Asia and Africa, in contrast to the exclusively North American plastomenines.
Genera
These extinct genera are known:
Subfamily Plastomeninae
†Aspideretoides
†Atoposemys
†Gilmoremys
Tribe Plastomenini
†Hutchemys
†Helopanoplia
†Plastomenus
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Labi-labi (hewan)
- Plastomeninae
- Trionychidae
- Cyclanorbinae
- Paleobiota of the Hell Creek Formation
- Hutchemys
- Rafetus
- 2009 in paleontology
- Gilmoremys
- 2022 in reptile paleontology