Archosauriformes (Ancient Greek for 'ruling lizards', and Latin for 'form') is a clade of diapsid encompassing Archosaur and some of their close relatives. It was defined by Jacques Gauthier (1994) as the clade stemming from the last common ancestor of Proterosuchidae and Archosauria.Gauthier J. A. (1994): The diversification of the amniotes. In: D. R. Prothero and R. M. Schoch (ed.) Major Features of Vertebrate Evolution: 129-159. Knoxville, Tennessee: The Paleontological Society. Phil Senter (2005) defined it as the most exclusive clade containing Proterosuchus and Archosauria. Gauthier as part of the Phylonyms (2020) defined the clade as the last common ancestor of Chicken, Alligator, and Proterosuchus, and all its descendants. Archosauriforms are a branch of Archosauromorpha which originated in the Late Permian (roughly 252 million years ago) and persist to the present day as the two surviving archosaur groups: Crocodilia and Bird.
Archosauriforms present several traits historically ascribed to the group Archosauria. These include serrated teeth set in deep sockets, a more active metabolism, and an antorbital fenestra (a hole in the skull in front of the eyes). Reptiles with these traits have also been termed "Thecodontia" in older methods of classification. Thecodontia is a Paraphyly group, and its usage as a Taxonomy category has been rejected under modern cladistics systems. The name Archosauriformes is intended as a Monophyly replacement compatible with modern taxonomy.
In 2016, Martin Ezcurra provided the name Eucrocopoda for the clade including all archosauriforms more Crown group (closer to archosaurs) than erythrosuchids. He defined the clade all taxa more closely related to Euparkeria capensis, Proterochampsa, Doswellia kaltenbachi, Parasuchus hislopi, Passer domesticus (the house sparrow), or Crocodylus niloticus (the Nile crocodile) than to Proterosuchus fergusi or Erythrosuchus africanus. The name translates to "true crocodile feet", in reference to the possession of a crocodilian-style Crurotarsal. Eucrocopodans include the families Euparkeriidae (small, agile reptiles),Proterochampsidae (narrow-snouted predators endemic to South America), and Doswelliidae (heavily armored Laurasia reptiles similar to proterochampsids), as well as various other strange reptiles such as Vancleavea and Asperoris.
The most successful archosauriforms, and the only members to survive into the Jurassic, were the . Archosauria includes crocodilians, birds, and all descendants of their common ancestor. Extinct archosaurs include , Rauisuchidae (both members of the crocodilian branch), Pterosaur, and non-avian Dinosaur (both members of the avian branch). Anatomy, Phylogeny and Palaeobiology of Early Archosaurs and Their Kin
Developmental, physiological, anatomical and palaeontological lines of evidence indicate that crocodilians evolved from endothermic ancestors. Living crocodilians are ambush predators adapted to a semi-aquatic lifestyle that benefits from ectothermy due to the lower oxygen intake that allows longer diving time. The mixing of oxygenated and deoxygenated blood in their circulatory system is apparently an innovation that benefits ectothermic life. Earlier archosaurs likely lacked those adaptations and instead had completely separated blood as birds and mammals do. A similar process occurred in phytosaurs, which were also semi-aquatic.
The similarities between pterosaur, and integument suggest a common origin of thermal insulation (feathers) in ornithodirans at least 250 million years ago. Erythrosuchids living in high latitudes might have benefited from some sort of insulation. If Longisquama was an archosauromorph, it could be associated with the origin of feathers.
Below is a cladogram from Sengupta et al. (2017), based on an updated version of Ezcurra (2016) that reexamined all historical members of the "Proterosuchia" (a polyphyletic historical group including and ). The placement of fragmentary taxa that had to be removed to increase tree resolution are indicated by dashed lines (in the most derived position that they can be confidently assigned to). Taxa that are nomina dubia are indicated by the note "dubium". Bold terminal taxa are collapsed.
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