The phylogeny and taxonomy of the Tyrannosauridae
Author
Holtz, T. R.
text
2001
2001-12-31
Indiana University Press
Bloomington
Editor
Tanke D. H.
Editor
Carpenter K.
Mesozoic Vertebrate Life
64
83
book chapter
10.5281/zenodo.3245327
9bf3a9f5-cd36-4be6-bba9-49607815bcd0
3245327
As
in some previous studies (
Matthew and Brown 1922
;
Olshevsky et al.. 1995a
,
b
;
Currie in press
),
Tyrannosauridae
was found to comprise two clades:
Aublysodontinae
and
Tyrannosaurinae
. Potential phylogenetic taxonomic definitions for the clades in question might be:
Tyrannosauridae
, all descendants of the most recent common ancestor of
Tyrannosaurus
and
Aublysodon
;
Aublysodontinae
,
Aublysodon
and all taxa sharing a more recent common ancestor with it than with
Tyrannosaurus
; and
Tyrannosaurinae
,
Tyrannosaurus
and all taxa sharing a more recent common ancestor with it than with
Aublysodon
. However, these definitions must be provisional, as the type species of
Aublysodon
,
A
.
mirandus
, is known only from isolated premaxillary teeth, while the somewhat more complete
A
.
molnari
is known only from skull elements and may eventually prove to be a different genus. Similar problems would result from using
Alectrosaurus
rather than
Aublysodon
as the anchor taxon for Aublysodontrnae.
(Note that the phylogenetic taxonomy proposed by
Sereno [1998]
is problematic as well: his "
Tyrannosauridae
" is defined as all taxa closer to
Tyrannosaurus
thanto
Alectrosaurus
,
Aublysodon
, and
Nanotyrannus
. The latter specimen is very likely a juvenile
Tyrannosaunts rex
[
Carr
1999
; see also below], rendering his "
Tyrannosauridae
" as a subgroup within the species
T. rex
[all specimens sharing a more recent common ancestor with the type specimen of
T. rex
than with the "type " of
Nanotyrannus]
. Furthermore,
Sereno's [1998
] "
Tyrannosaurinae
, " all taxa closer to
Tyrannosaurus
than to
Albertosaurus
,
Daspletosaurus
, or
Gorgosaurus
, would be limited to the genus
Tyrannosaurus
itself foilowing the phylogeny presented here. It is recommended that until such time as the more complete Mongolian specimens currently referred to
Alectrosaurus olseni
[see below], which seem to represent the best materiai of primitive tyrannosaur, are more adequately described, that the provisional phylogenetic taxonomy proposed here be used for tyrannosaurid systematics.)