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Sunday, March 3, 2019

Tiny frogs of the Chinle

I am embarrassed to realize that after five full years of doing this, with a header mentioning "National Park Service paleontology" and "the Mesozoic", I had not done anything with the Chinle Formation or Petrified Forest National Park. This week offers a fine opportunity to correct this oversight, with the publication of the first frog fossils from the Chinle Formation.

The Chinle Formation is a terrestrial unit, with its colorful rocks deposited in various floodplain, river, lake, and other settings during the Late Triassic. The mosaic of settings led to a variety of rock types, from conglomerates to mudstones, with a healthy supply of volcanic ash from eruption centers to the west. Because we're talking about the Late Triassic, before the end-Triassic extinctions gave dinosaurs the opportunity to fill most of the empty terrestrial niches, the Chinle is full of fossils from all sorts of unusual and obscure animals. (And also petrified wood and freshwater mussels. Lots and lots of petrified wood and mussels!) It and its correlatives are usually good for at least one surprise every few years. Lurking among all of the phytosaurs and aetosaurs and so forth were representatives of lineages that would blossom later. Some of them we know from bones (dinosaurs, early croc relatives, pterosaurs, etc.), others can be suspected based on time and place but haven't yet been found. With this week's announcement, frogs move from the potential to the confirmed (Stocker et al. 2019).

The Chinle Formation is divisible into a number of members, depending on where you are. In ascending order, the units in the Petrified Forest NP area are the Mesa Redondo, Blue Mesa, Sonsela, Petrified Forest, and Owl Rock members. For the frogs, we're dealing with the Blue Mesa and Sonsela members, representing approximately 223 to 213 million years ago. (Following the stratigraphy of the Chinle Formation requires a certain amount of effort and dedication. Not only are different members found in different places, but usage has varied over time.) The three frog-producing localities are spread from the park to the famous Placerias Quarry near St. Johns, Arizona (Stocker et al. 2019).

An outcrop of the Sonsela Member, from the park website (NPS/Andrew V. Kearns).

Frogs, being small and delicate, are not exactly heavily represented in the fossil record. The frog lineage, Salientia, is known back to the Early Triassic, but if you were doing a Compact Thescelosaurus-like project on Mesozoic salientians you'd be finished pretty quickly. Salientia includes early stem-frogs plus the crown group Anura, which is the group consisting of all living frogs, their most recent common ancestor, and everything else that falls within that group. There are to date two Early Triassic stem-frogs, the well-known Triadobatrachus of Madagascar and the somewhat less famous Czatkobatrachus of Poland, with the next named salientian being a respectable frog's jump all the way into the Early Jurassic of Arizona, Prosalirus of the Kayenta Formation. The Kayenta has historically proven stubborn about this whole "absolute dating" thing, but an age in the first half of the Early Jurassic is the consensus, so that's a gap of something approaching 60 million years (approximately 250 to 190 million years). The unnamed Chinle salientian practically splits the difference (Stocker et al. 2019).

The Chinle salientian is known from five tiny fossils. Fortunately, four of them are ilia, which are very distinctive bones in frogs: there is a cup-like socket for the femur and a long thin blade directed anteriorly, lengthened by cartilage, part of the mechanism that gives frogs their spring. In the case of the Chinle form, they are also well into the microvert range: approximately 6.2 mm long, or about a quarter of an inch, the kind of stuff you find when you run sediment through screens as opposed to spotting while hiking around. The whole animal would have been less than about 25 mm long, or about an inch, in the realm of modern miniature frogs (Stocker et al. 2019). So, if you were thinking that ur-frogs might have been prehistoric giants, well... not so much in the Chinle. There *were* enormous amphibians in the Chinle, specifically the metoposaur Koskinonodon and its equally enormous taxonomic history, but it isn't closely related to anything living and it didn't look much like a frog.

The form of the hip joint and shaft suggest that the Chinle form was well on the way to modern frog jumping mechanics (Stocker et al. 2019). It may have been a true anuran, but only time and more fossils will tell. The presence of a stem-frog or true anuran in the Chinle also has some implications for frog distribution and paleoecology. The two Early Triassic stem-frogs lived outside of the tropics, whereas the Chinle form was more or less at the equator in western Pangea, showing that the frog lineage had spread across the supercontinent within the Triassic. Also of interest is the persistence of salientians from the Chinle into the Kayenta; over the length of the Chinle, the local climate became more and more arid (Stocker et al. 2019).

A Triassic frog clings to the snout of a phytosaur, used with permission by Andrey Atuchin (supplied by Adam Marsh/PEFO).

References

Stocker, M. R., S. J. Nesbitt, B. T. Kligman, D. J. Paluh, A. D. Marsh, D. C. Blackburn, and W. G. Parker. 2019. The earliest equatorial record of frogs from the Late Triassic of Arizona. Biology Letters 15:20180922. doi:10.1098/rsbl.2018.0922.

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