Bairdemys, a New Side-Necked Turtle (Pelomedusoides: Podocnemididae) from the Miocene of the Caribbean
Author
GAFFNEY, EUGENE S.
Author
TONG, HAIYAN
Author
MEYLAN, PETER A.
text
American Museum Novitates
2002
2002-03-26
3359
1
28
http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.1206/0003-0082%282002%29379%3C0001%3AGANSNT%3E2.0.CO%3B2
journal article
5842
10.1206/0003-0082(2002)379<0001:GANSNT>2.0.CO;2
1f7cb507-ec2c-4ce0-8534-fd7372321487
0003-0082
4712203
Bairdemys
,
species indeterminate
SPECIMEN: AMNH 30000, poorly preserved skull, figured in
SánchezVillagra et al. (2000)
.
LOCALITY: Cerro La Cruz, NW area of
Lara State
,
4 km
NW of Caserío La Mesa. See
SánchezVillagra et al., 2000
, for map.
HORIZON: Castillo Formation, early Miocene.
DISCUSSION: This skull was figured and briefly described in
SánchezVillagra et al. (2000)
as ‘‘genus indet., of
‘Podocnemis’
venezuelensis
Wood and Díaz de Gamero, 1971
’’. The skull is clearly a
Shweboemys
Group podocnemidid based on its cavum pterygoideus and secondary palate. It has the palatal convexity diagnostic of
Bairdemys
. However, the skull differs from both species of
Bairdemys
in being flatter and lacking the degree of snout arching seen in
Bairdemys
. AMNH 30000 is not well preserved and these differences might be due to crushing, although there is no other indication of this. Unfortunately, sutures are not visible, and most of the bone surface is eroded.
Comparison with the diagnostic criteria of the
Bairdemys
species (table 1) shows that it has the straight rather than pinched snout of
B. venezuelensis
, and the apparently narrow er skull and shallower palatal depressions of
B. hartsteini
. Its length is
92 mm
, just intermediate between the
80 mm
of
B. hartsteini
and the
105–120 mm
of
B. venezuelensis
. AMNH 30000 could very well be a distinct species of
Bairdemys
, but its poor preservation makes it very difficult to be sure about the characters mentioned. For the present, we