Browsing by Author "Arias, JS"
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- ItemEnigmatic amphibians in mid-Cretaceous amber were chameleon-like ballistic feeders(American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), 2020-11-06) Daza, JD; Stanley, EL; Bolet, A; Bauer, AM; Arias, JS; Čerňanský, A; Bevitt, JJ; Wagner, P; Evans, SEExtant amphibians are represented by three fairly simple morphologies: the mostly hopping frogs and toads, the low-crawling salamanders, and the limbless caecilians. Until the early Pleistocene—and for more than 165 million years—there was another group, the albanerpetontids. We know little about this group because amphibian fossils are poorly preserved, and previous specimens from this group are both rare and mostly badly damaged. Daza et al. describe a set of fossils preserved in amber showing that this group was unusual both in their habitat use (they may been climbers) and their feeding mode, which appears to have been convergent with the ballistic feeding now seen in chameleons (see the Perspective by Wake).