About: Rhinesuchus   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : dbkwik:resource/6_E3Vm7U5aYPXO61bTJKrA==, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

The Labyrinthodont (later identified as Rhinesuchus in The Complete Guide To Prehistoric Life) was a prehistoric amphibian from what is now South Africa. It lived during the Permian.

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  • Rhinesuchus
rdfs:comment
  • The Labyrinthodont (later identified as Rhinesuchus in The Complete Guide To Prehistoric Life) was a prehistoric amphibian from what is now South Africa. It lived during the Permian.
  • Rhinesuchus was an ancient amphibian in a dying world. Rhinesuchus was a temnospondyl, which were some of the first amphibians to evolve (apart from the most primitive Tetrapods like Hynerpeton). The temnospondyls also became large, and evolved into more advanced amphibians like the reptiliomorphs (Seymouria). Rhinesuchus, unfortunately, was not a reptiliomorph and needed to survive in water. It dwelled in the rivers of Permian Africa. The waters were murky, but the best around (only because there were virtually no rivers around).
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dbkwik:scratch-pad...iPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:scratchpad/...iPageUsesTemplate
locality
Period
Type
  • Temnospondyl amphibian
Meaning
  • Nose Crocodile
Species
  • Koolasuchus
Creature Name
  • Rhinesuchus
Family
  • Labyrinthodontidae
Diet
  • Carnivore
abstract
  • Rhinesuchus was an ancient amphibian in a dying world. Rhinesuchus was a temnospondyl, which were some of the first amphibians to evolve (apart from the most primitive Tetrapods like Hynerpeton). The temnospondyls also became large, and evolved into more advanced amphibians like the reptiliomorphs (Seymouria). Rhinesuchus, unfortunately, was not a reptiliomorph and needed to survive in water. It dwelled in the rivers of Permian Africa. The waters were murky, but the best around (only because there were virtually no rivers around). Rhinesuchus would have acted like a crocodile, attacking anything that came to drink. It would even attack a large predator in desperation (Gorgonops). In the very dry seasons, Rhinesuchus would have made a cocoon to hibernate in. It would have emerged out when the dry seasons were over. The cocoon would have been buried underground, but it still would have been vulnerable to attck.
  • The Labyrinthodont (later identified as Rhinesuchus in The Complete Guide To Prehistoric Life) was a prehistoric amphibian from what is now South Africa. It lived during the Permian.
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