The repeated evolution of dental apicobasal ridges in aquatic-feeding mammals and reptiles

MR McCurry, AR Evans, EMG Fitzgerald… - Biological Journal of …, 2019 - academic.oup.com
Abstract Since the Permian, Earth's aquatic ecosystems have been ecologically dominated
by numerous lineages of predatory amniotes. Many of these groups evolved elevated ridges …

[PDF][PDF] The repeated evolution of dental apicobasal ridges in aquatic-feeding mammals and reptiles

MR McCurry, AR Evans, EMG Fitzgerald… - Biological Journal of …, 2019 - academic.oup.com
Abstract Since the Permian, Earth's aquatic ecosystems have been ecologically dominated
by numerous lineages of predatory amniotes. Many of these groups evolved elevated ridges …

[PDF][PDF] The repeated evolution of dental apicobasal ridges in aquatic-feeding mammals and reptiles

MR MCCURRY, AR EVANS, EMG FITZGERALD… - researchmgt.monash.edu
The upper trophic levels of aquatic predator guilds have been dominated by mammal and
reptile lineages in the past 250 Myr: from ichthyosaurs, sauropterygians and mosasaurs in …

[PDF][PDF] The repeated evolution of dental apicobasal ridges in aquatic-feeding mammals and reptiles

MR MCCURRY, AR EVANS, EMG FITZGERALD… - academia.edu
The upper trophic levels of aquatic predator guilds have been dominated by mammal and
reptile lineages in the past 250 Myr: from ichthyosaurs, sauropterygians and mosasaurs in …

The repeated evolution of dental apicobasal ridges in aquatic-feeding mammals and reptiles

MR McCurry, AR Evans… - … Journal of the …, 2019 - research.monash.edu
Abstract Since the Permian, Earth's aquatic ecosystems have been ecologically dominated
by numerous lineages of predatory amniotes. Many of these groups evolved elevated ridges …

repeated evolution of dental apicobasal ridges in aquatic-feeding mammals and reptiles.

MR McCurry, AR Evans… - … Journal of the …, 2019 - search.ebscohost.com
Abstract Since the Permian, Earth's aquatic ecosystems have been ecologically dominated
by numerous lineages of predatory amniotes. Many of these groups evolved elevated ridges …