Beelzebufo

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Beelzebufo
Temporal range: Late Cretaceous, 70 Ma
Beelzebufo BW.jpg
Life restoration of a B. ampinga eating a theropod
Scientific classification e
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Amphibia
Order: Anura
Family: Ceratophryidae
Genus: †Beelzebufo
Evans, Jones, & Krause, 2008
Type species
<templatestyles src="Noitalic/styles.css"/>Beelzebufo ampinga
Evans, Jones, & Krause, 2008
Species

<templatestyles src="Noitalic/styles.css"/>B. ampinga Evans, Jones, & Krause, 2008

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Beelzebufo ampinga (/bˌɛlzˈbjuːf æmˈpɪŋɡə/ or /ˌblzəˈbjuːf/) was a particularly large species of prehistoric frog described in 2008. Common names assigned by the popular media include devil frog,[1] devil toad,[2] and the frog from hell.[3]

Fossils of Beelzebufo have been recovered from strata of the Maevarano Formation in Madagascar, dating to the late Cretaceous period, some 70 million years ago (Mya).[4]

Etymology

The generic name Beelzebufo is a portmanteau of Beelzebub (a Semitic deity whose name may be translated as "Lord of the Flies", sometimes identified either as one of the chief lieutenants, or alter ego of the Christian Devil) and bufo (Latin for "toad").

The specific name ampinga means "shield" in Malagasy.

Description

File:Beelzebufo.png
Three-dimensional digital reconstruction

The species may have grown to 41 cm (16 in) and 4.5 kg (9.9 lb) — larger than any living frogs,[5] including the largest known species, the goliath frog, which can be up to 32 cm (13 in). The head was big,[6] and bones of the skull roof show a rugous external surface, indicating at least parts of the head may have borne bony scales, called scutes.

The skull sutures are open in even the biggest species of Beelzebufo, showing that it may have grown even bigger.[4]

Biogeography

Although the fossils of Beelzebufo appear in what is now Madagascar, which, still attached to India, had split from the coast of Somalia in the earliest stage of the late Jurassic,[7] it superficially resembles its closest living relatives, the horned toads of South America, of which the largest today grow to 15 cm (6 in) long.

As West Gondwana (South America) rifted away from East Gondwana, opening from the north and spreading southward, open marine conditions in the widening South Atlantic obtained by about 110 Mya, isolating the amphibians on either side; the last common ancestor of Beelzebufo and the South American Ceratophryidae is most likely to have existed before that date and probably before seafloor-spreading demonstrates the earlier isolation of Madagascar-India, a very long time undocumented by fossils.[8]

Alternatively, the history of archaeogeography could be rewritten: Richard Lane, program director in NSF's Division of Earth Sciences, said, "The occurrence of this frog in Madagascar and its relatives' existence in South America provides strong evidence that the supercontinent Gondwana 'disassembled' during the latest part of the Cretaceous."[1]

Lifestyle

Size and shape comparison of Beelzebufo with a typical six-inch-long (15-cm) American bullfrog (Rana catesbeiana). Cranwell's horned frog (Ceratophrys cranwelli) is standing in as a model for the former.

In comparison with the living Ceratophryidae, Beelzebufo most likely was a predator whose expansive mouth allowed it to eat relatively large prey, perhaps even juvenile dinosaurs.[9]

Discovery

The first fossil fragments were found in 1993 by David W. Krause of New York's Stony Brook University, but it took 14 years for scientists Susan E. Evans, Marc E. H. Jones, and Krause to assemble enough data for publication in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the journal of the United States National Academy of Sciences.

Some 75 fossil fragments have been found. Researchers have been able to reconstruct parts of the frog's skeleton, including nearly the entire skull.

See also

References

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  6. Evans S et al. (2013), "Big, bad and bizarre: New material of Beelzebufo, a new hyperossified anuran from the Late Cretaceous of Madagascar, yields further surprises", Society of Vertebrate Paleontology: Abstracts of papers, 73rd Annual Meeting, p. 123.
  7. Lawrence A. Lawver, Lisa M. Gahagan and Ian w.D. Dalziel, "A tight-fit early Mesozoic Gondwana: a plate reconstruction perspective", 1999, p. 5 "Africa-Madagascar", with citations (on-line text).
  8. Frogs of Gondwana are only very spottily represented in fossils.
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