Iberospondylus

Eye-be-ro-spon-de-lus.
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Benjamin Gutierrez

Vertebrate Paleontologist

Benjamin Gutierrez is a leading expert on dinosaurs, particularly the mighty theropods. His fieldwork in South America has uncovered new species and provided insights into dinosaur social structures.

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Name

Iberospondylus ‭(‬Iberian vertebra‭)‬.

Phonetic

Eye-be-ro-spon-de-lus.

Named By

Michel Laurin‭ & ‬Rodrigo Soler-Gijon‭ ‬-‭ ‬2001.

Classification

Chordata,‭ ‬Amphibia,‭ ‬Temnospondyli.

Diet

Carnivore/Piscivore.

Species

I.‭ ‬schultzei‭

Size

Unavailable.

Known locations

Spain.

Time Period

Late Carboniferous.

Fossil representation

Partial skull and post cranial skeletal remains of a few individuals.

In Depth

       Iberospondylus is a genus of temnospondyl amphibian that lived in the Iberian Peninsula of Spain during the late Carboniferous.‭ ‬Two interesting points about Iberospondylus are that the genus is one of the oldest known,‭ ‬and extends the range of such creatures living in Spain by forty-five million years.‭ ‬Additionally,‭ ‬fossils of Iberospondylus have been recovered from coastal sediments,‭ ‬raising the possibility that Iberospondylus may have hunted is salt water.‭ ‬Previously this has been thought to impossible due to salts in sea water passing through the skin of an amphibian through osmosis.‭ ‬But if Iberospondylus found a way to adapt then this would force a serious rethink about what we thought we know.

       There could however be two more mundane explanations to explain the presence of temnoposndyl amphibians on the coast.‭ ‬One could be that the bodies of dead Iberospondylus were simply washed downstream and deposited before they were swept all the way out to sea.‭ ‬Another could be that Iberospondylus were simply hunting in freshwater lagoons near the coastline.‭ ‬Freshwater lagoons however may actually be a clue to how a species could develop tolerance for salt water.‭ ‬With a‭ ‘‬salt‭’ ‬level somewhere between what is between a fresh land deposit and what is in the sea,‭ ‬successive generations of a species might be able to develop an increased tolerance to the salts before entering waters with higher concentrations.

       As always there are more questions and theories than definitive answers,‭ ‬but nature has a way of proving long established ideas wrong,‭ ‬and there is no telling what might be discovered in the future.

Further Reading

-‭ ‬The oldest stegocephalian from the Iberian Peninsula:‭ ‬evidence that temnospondyls were euryhaline.‭ ‬-Comptes Rendus de l’Acad�mie des Sciences,‭ ‬Series III‭ ‬-‭ ‬Sciences de la Vie‭ ‬324‭(‬5‭)‬:495-501.‭ ‬-‭ ‬Michel Laurin‭ & ‬Rodrigo Soler-Gijon‭ ‬-‭ ‬2001.

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