Lemmysuchus is a genus of Machimosauridae from the Middle Jurassic Callovian of England and France. Like many other Teleosauroidea from Europe, it has had a convoluted taxonomic history.
The validity of "Steneosaurus" obtusidens was disputed in a 1987 paper reviewing the type specimens of nominal teleosauroid species from the Oxford Clay. Characters used by Charles William Andrews to distinguish "S." obtusidens from other species were dismissed as variable within specimens of Steneosaurus, and "S." obtusidens was sunk as a junior synonym of Steneosaurus durobrivensis (= S. edwardsi). Some authors considered this taxon a probable junior synonym of Machimosaurus based on a subsequently discovered specimen found in Callovian-age exposures in Calvados, Lower Normandy, France, though they stressed that a taxonomic review of blunt-snouted teleosaurids was needed.Hua, S., 1999, Le Crocodilien Machimosaurus mosae (Thalattosuchia, Teleosauridae) du Kimmeridgien du Boulonnais (Pas de Calais, France): Palaeontographica Abt. A., v. 252, Lfg. 4-6, p. 141-170. This synonymy was accepted in a 2009 paper regarding thalattosuchian morphometrics without comment.
In 2013, a new specimen of Machimosaurus was described from Late Jurassic (Kimmeridgian deposits in southern Germany (later named Machimosaurus buffetauti), and it became clear that variation within blunt-toothed teleosauroids was taxonomically significant enough for "Steneosaurus" obtusidens to be recognized as generically distinct from Machimosaurus. Other cladistic and comparative studies agreed with this assessment, recovering "S." obtusidens in a clade with Machimosaurus and Steneosaurus edwardsi.
In 2017, the species was moved to its own genus, Lemmysuchus, referring to Ian Fraser Kilmister, better known as "Lemmy", of the band Motörhead,"Scaly snuggle-toothed beast? That'll be Lemmy" > Daily Telegraph Issue no 50,455 dated Wednesday 9 August 2017 and the Greek word for crocodile, .
The cladogram below is from an analysis conducted by Johnson and colleagues in 2020.
Lemmysuchus is estimated to have a body length of roughly 5.8 meters (19 feet) based on known remains.
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