Stegops is an extinct genus of euskelian temnospondyl from the Late Carboniferous of the eastern United States. Fossils are known from the Pennsylvanian coal deposits of Linton, Ohio. It was once classified in the eryopoid family Zatrachydidae because it and other zatrachydids have spikes extending from the margins of its skull, but it is now classified as a dissorophoid that independently evolved spikes.[1] Stegops was first named by American paleontologist Edward Drinker Cope in 1885, with his description of the type species Stegops divaricata. Cope had also named a species of Sauropleura from Linton in 1875, which he called Sauropleura newberryi. This species was later synonymized with Stegops divaricata when the type specimen of S. newberryi was prepared and found to be a large specimen of Stegops.[2]

Stegops
Temporal range: Late Carboniferous
Stegops divaricata Cope from the Carboniferous of Ohio
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Order: Temnospondyli
Superfamily: Dissorophoidea
Genus: Stegops
Cope, 1885
Type species
Stegops divaricata
Cope, 1885
Synonyms
  • Stegops newberryi (Cope, 1875 [originally Sauropleura newberryi])

Phylogeny

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Reconstruction of Stegops divaricata based on Carroll (2009).

Stegops was included in a phylogenetic analysis in 2006. It was placed in the clade Dissorophoidea, but because it shared features with both of the two main dissorophoid groups, Amphibamidae and Olsoniformes, its exact placement within Dissorophoidea is uncertain.[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b Milner, A.; Schoch, R. (2006). "Stegops, a problematic spiky-headed temnospondyl". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 26 (3, Suppl.): 101A. doi:10.1080/02724634.2006.10010069.
  2. ^ Hook, R.W.; Baird, D. (1984). "Ichthycanthus platypus Cope, 1877, reidentified as the dissorophoid amphibian Amphibamus lyelli". Journal of Paleontology. 58 (3): 697–702.