Eryops

Eh-ry-ops.
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Lilah Turner

Evolutionary Biologist

Lilah Turner investigates how prehistoric animals adapted to changing environments, offering insights into evolution's mechanisms.

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Name

Eryops‭ (‬Drawn out face‭)

Phonetic

Eh-ry-ops.

Named By

Edward Drinker Cope‭ ‬-‭ ‬1877.

Classification

Chordata,‭ ‬Amphibia,‭ ‬Temnospondyli,‭ ‬Eryopoidea,‭ ‬Eryopidae.

Diet

Carnivore/piscivore.

Species

E.‭ ‬megacephalus

Size

1.5‭ ‬-‭ ‬2‭ ‬meters long.

Known locations

USA.

Time Period

Lower Permian.

Fossil representation

Several skeletons,‭ ‬skull is often preserved due to its strong build.

In Depth

       Eryops is one of the better represented predators of the early Permian era,‭ ‬and is likely to have been near to the top of the food chain.‭ ‬It had a particularly stocky build which was supported by a particularly strong spine so that it would not suffocate under its own bulk.‭ ‬Respiration was carried out by actually breathing into lungs as opposed to reliance on breathing through the skin,‭ ‬which would not have been very efficient due to the body mass to skin surface area ratio.

       Due to the robust bones of the skull,‭ ‬it is one of the better preserved and understood parts.‭ ‬Of particular note is the ear structure which is well adapted for use out of the water.‭ ‬Eryops had no chewing motion in its jaw structure and would have had to swallow its prey‭ ‬whole.‭ ‬A very special predatory adaptation is teeth on the palate‭ (‬roof of the mouth‭) ‬that would have helped in seizing and holding onto prey as it tossed it around for swallowing.‭

       Although Eryops had some good terrestrial adaptations,‭ ‬its bulk meant that it would have been very slow and cumbersome while on the land.‭ ‬The limbs projected out from the sides and would have only just been able to lift the body off the ground.‭ ‬While in the water however,‭ ‬Eryops had the buoyancy of the water to support its bulk and it would have been a much more agile hunter.

Further Reading

– Descriptions of extinct Vertebrata from the Permian and Triassic formations of the United States. – Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 17(100):182-193 – Edward Drinker Cope – 1877. – Eryopsid Remains from the Conemaugh Group, Braxton County, West Virginia – Southeastern Geology, 13(4): 265-273. – James L. Murphy – 1971. – Upper Pennsylvanian tetrapods from the Ada Formation of Seminole County, Oklahoma. – Journal of Paleontology 76(3):529-545 – R. A. Kissel & T. M. Lehman – 2002. – The appendicular skeleton of Eryops megacephalus Cope, 1877 (Temnospondyli: Eryopoidea) from the Lower Permian of North America. – Journal of Paleontology. 80 (3): 561–580. – Kat Pawley & Anne Warren – 2006.

SPECIES SPOTLIGHT