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514 tocExceptional crocodylomorph biodiversity of "La Cantalera" site (lower Barremian; Lower Cretaceous) in Teruel, Spain

Eduardo Puértolas-Pascual, Raquel Rabal-Garcés, and José Ignacio Canudo

Article number: 18.2.28A
https://doi.org/10.26879/514
Copyright Society for Vertebrate Paleontology, June 2015

Author biographies
Plain-language and multi-lingual abstracts
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Submission: 2 October 2014. Acceptance: 26 May 2015

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ABSTRACT

The palaeontological site of La Cantalera in Teruel, Spain (Blesa Formation, Lower Cretaceous) can be characterized as the site with the greatest biodiversity of vertebrates (32 taxa) from the lower Barremian of the Iberian Peninsula. Remains of amphibians, lizards, turtles, crocodiles, pterosaurs, dinosaurs and mammals have been recovered. The most common taxa are crocodylomorphs, and their most abundant remains are small isolated teeth. Six morphotypes have been identified, which may correspond to at least four different sympatric crocodylomorph taxa. This site presents a similar assemblage to other European Lower Cretaceous sites, with morphotypes that may correspond to the families Goniopholididae, Bernissartiidae, Atoposauridae and multiple ziphodont crocodylomorphs. The crocodylomorph assemblage of La Cantalera is characterized by the absence of large individuals and presents a wide variety of dental morphologies adapted to diets ranging from generalist to highly specialized. This rich biodiversity could be due to concentration of vertebrates into restricted flooded areas during dry seasons within a marsh ecosystem. Furthermore, La Cantalera could also be close to a nesting area, which would explain the abundance of small-sized individuals and the presence of fossil crocodiloid eggshells.

Eduardo Puértolas-Pascual. Grupo Aragosaurus-IUCA, Departamento de Ciencias de la Tierra, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de Zaragoza, Calle Pedro Cerbuna 12, 50009 Zaragoza (Spain). puertola@unizar.es
Raquel Rabal-Garcés. Grupo Aragosaurus-IUCA, Departamento de Ciencias de la Tierra, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de Zaragoza, Calle Pedro Cerbuna 12, 50009 Zaragoza (Spain) raquelrabal@hotmail.com
José Ignacio Canudo. Grupo Aragosaurus-IUCA, Departamento de Ciencias de la Tierra, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de Zaragoza, Calle Pedro Cerbuna 12, 50009 Zaragoza (Spain) jicanudo@unizar.es

Keywords: Cretaceous, Lower; Crocodylomorpha; teeth; palaeoecology; palaeobiodiversity; Iberian Range

Final citation: Puértolas-Pascual, Eduardo, Rabal-Garcés, Raquel, and Canudo, José Ignacio. 2015. Exceptional crocodylomorph biodiversity of “La Cantalera” site (lower Barremian; Lower Cretaceous) in Teruel, Spain. Palaeontologia Electronica 18.2.28A: 1-16. https://doi.org/10.26879/514
palaeo-electronica.org/content/2015/1229-biodiversity-of-la-cantalera

INTRODUCTION

There are several studies of palaeontological sites with vertebrate accumulations in the Barremian (Lower Cretaceous) of the Iberian Peninsula (Rauhut, 2002; Cuenca-Bescós and Canudo, 2003; Ruiz-Omeñaca et al., 2004; Buscalioni et al., 2008; Canudo et al., 2002a, 2010). La Cantalera (Josa, Teruel) is of great interest because it is one of the macro- and micro-vertebrate accumulation sites with the greatest palaeobiodiversity in the Lower Cretaceous of Europe, with at least 32 different taxa (Table 1) (Canudo et al., 2010). The vertebrate assemblage is composed almost exclusively of terrestrial and amphibious organisms that inhabited the vicinity of the site. La Cantalera has been considered to provide a good temporal sample of the faunal community that inhabited the area (Canudo et al., 2010; Gasca et al., 2014).

The most abundant skeletal remains found in La Cantalera site are isolated teeth (Ruiz-Omeñaca et al., 1997; Canudo et al., 2004, 2010). The most common remains are crocodylomorph teeth. Together with disarticulated postcranial remains, these fossils testify to the high palaeobiodiversity of crocodylomorphs at this site. Teeth belonging to multituberculate mammals, peripheral plates of turtles, cranial and postcranial remains of amphibians and lizards, isolated pterosaur teeth and a single vertebra from an osteichthyan fish have also been identified. The greatest biodiversity at the site is associated with non-avian dinosaurs, with identified isolated teeth and postcranial remains from: ornithopods, theropods, sauropods and thyreophorans (Ruíz-Omeñaca et al., 1997, 2001; Badiola et al., 2008; Canudo et al., 2010). Additional eggshell fossils have been recovered from the site, belonging to turtles, non-avian dinosaurs and crocodylomorphs (Moreno-Azanza et al., 2009, 2014; Canudo et al., 2010). Furthermore, coprolites with six different morphologies have been identified (Ruíz-Omeñaca et al., 2001).

There have been relatively few studies of crocodylomorphs from the Lower Cretaceous of the Iberian Range (Buscalioni and Sanz, 1984, 1987, 1990b; Buscalioni et al., 1984, 2008, 2013; Sanz et al., 1984; Brinkmann, 1992; Ortega et al., 1996; Ortega, 2004; Puértolas-Pascual et al., 2015). These studies have been undertaken over the past three decades on the basis of isolated remains and specimens represented by cranial and postcranial material, primarily from the sites of Teruel (Josa, Galve, Ariño and Andorra) and Cuenca (Las Hoyas, Uña and Buenache de la Sierra).

Referring to Teruel, several studies of the Barremian have been carried out at palaeontological sites within the Galve syncline on the basis of teeth and isolated postcranial and cranial fragments (Buscalioni and Sanz, 1984, 1987; Sanz et al., 1984; Ruíz-Omeñaca et al., 2004). In these papers the crocodylomorph material was assigned to Mesoeucrocodylia indet., Neosuchia indet., cf. Machimosaurus sp., Goniopholididae, Atoposauridae and Bernissartia. Furthermore, a complete skull attributed to Bernissartia fagesii Dollo, 1883 was also described (Buscalioni et al., 1984; Buscalioni and Sanz, 1990b).

In Josa, where the site of La Cantalera (lower Barremian) is located, a preliminary study was carried out, focusing on a large sample of crocodylomorph teeth. This allowed the teeth to be grouped into different morphotypes, which were assigned to cf. Theriosuchus sp., Bernissartiidae indet., Goniopholididae indet. and cf. Lisboasaurus sp. (Canudo et al., 2010).

More recently, new studies have been carried out in more modern sediments in the Escucha Formation (lower Albian), close to the localities of Andorra and Ariño. In these sites two new species of goniopholidids have been described (Alcalá et al., 2012; Puértolas-Pascual et al., 2012, 2015; Buscalioni et al., 2013; Puértolas-Pascual and Canudo, 2013).

There are also several other studies based on isolated teeth from the Lower Cretaceous of Europe: the United Kingdom, France, Denmark, Sweden, Belgium and Portugal. Almost all of these sites have a similar assemblage composed of Goniopholididae, Bernissartiidae, Atoposauridae and other less abundant forms (Buscalioni et al., 2008; Schwarz-Wings et al., 2009).

In this context, the aim of the present paper is to review and describe the crocodylomorph tooth assemblage recovered from La Cantalera site in order to determine the variability and biodiversity of the site and compare this with other European sites of similar age.

GEOGRAPHICAL AND GEOLOGICAL SETTING

s figure1The palaeontological site of La Cantalera is situated in the northeast of the Iberian Peninsula, near the small locality of Josa in Teruel, Spain (Figure 1.1).

Geologically, the site is located in the Mesozoic Oliete Subbasin, which is one of the seven subbasins belonging to the Late Cretaceous Maestrazgo Basin (Soria de Miguel, 1997; Salas et al., 2001). This is located in the eastern part of the Iberian Range and borders the Tertiary basins of the Ebro River in the north and the locality of Montalbán in the south (Figure 1.1). During the Mesozoic, the Iberian Basin underwent a major extension related to the opening of the Atlantic (Salas et al., 2001). The Oliete Subbasin was formed during the second rifting stage that began in the Early Cretaceous, when the carbonate platform of the central sector of the Iberian Basin was fractured as a result of the process of extension, creating several subbasins (Soria de Miguel, 1997; Salas et al., 2001).

The Lower Cretaceous of the Oliete Subbasin is characterized by four megasequences: the Margas y Calizas de Blesa Formation; the Calizas de Alacón Formation; the Margas de Forcall Formation; and the Calizas de Oliete Formation (Soria de Miguel, 1997) (Figure 1.2-4). The site of La Cantalera forms part of the typical “Wealden facies” of the Lower Cretaceous. More specifically, it is located within the gray clays of the lower part of the Blesa Formation (Figus figure2re 2), which has traditionally been considered upper Hauterivian / lower Barremian in age (Soria et al., 1995; Canudo et al., 2002b; Aurell et al., 2004) due to the presence of the charophyte Atopochara trivolvis triquetra Grambast, 1968. However, the presence of this species at the base of the Blesa Formation indicates a lower Barremian age, as in the upper part of the Castellar Formation at Galve (Canudo et al., 2012).

In the area around Josa, the Blesa Formation displays a complex sedimentary evolution. Continental sedimentation predominates at the bottom, with alluvial, lacustrine and palustrine deposits (Figure 2), while the top shows facies of marshes and coastal lagoons. The site of La Cantalera has been interpreted as mudflat deposits associated with swampy areas with periodic droughts in an area of marshy vegetation. The significant concentration of vertebrate remains at the site of La Cantalera can perhaps be explained by the small size and isolated nature of the swampy domains, which might have attracted animals for feeding (Ruíz-Omeñaca et al., 1997; Aurell et al., 2004).

MATERIALS AND METHODS

The materials included in this study were recovered by washing and sieving (sieves of 2, 1 and 0.5 mm mesh) over three tons of sediment recovered during several field campaigns from 1997-2000. The study includes a total of 365 crocodylomorph teeth, usually with a size between 1 and 2 mm in height, although some specimens smaller than 0.5 mm or around 1 cm in height were also found. Broken or very worn teeth have not been taken into account in the measurements table (see Appendix).The figured and measured specimens have been designated with the abbreviations MPZ (Museum of Natural Sciences of the University of Zaragoza). All teeth were examined under an Olympus SZ40 binocular microscope with an LC20 digital camera incorporated and a scanning electron microscope SEM JEOL JSM 6360 (20kV, Working Distance = 15mm) at the University of Zaragoza. The picture scaling and measurements were performed with the software Olympus LCmicro (developed by Olympus Soft Imaging Solutions) and ImageJ (rsb.info.nih.gov/).

The fossil vertebrate assemblage from the La Cantalera site described in this paper is housed in the Museo de Ciencias Naturales de la Universidad de Zaragoza (MPZ).

SYSTEMATIC PALAEONTOLOGY

Because of the great intraspecific variation in tooth morphology and a shortage of phylogenetic information, it is difficult to assign a taxonomic status at generic and even at family level to isolated teeth belonging to Crocodylomorpha (Prasad and Broin, 2002; Buscalioni et al., 2008). We have thus decided to be conservative with the taxonomic assignment of each morphotype.

Superorder CROCODYLOMORPHA Walker, 1970 (sensu Clark, 1986)
Clade MESOEUCROCODYLIA Whetstone and Whybrow, 1983 (sensu Benton and Clark, 1988)
Clade NEOSUCHIA? Benton and Clark, 1988
Family GONIOPHOLIDIDAE? Cope, 1875
Genus and species undetermined
Figure 3

s figure3Referred material. 169 isolated teeth (46.30% of the sample = 365 teeth; MPZ 2014/468, 469, 470, 471a, 471b and 719 through 820).

Description. The referred teeth are represented by two different sizes, with large teeth ranging between 5 and 10 mm (Figure 3.1-2), and very small sizes ranging between 1 and 2 mm (Figure 3.3-4). They are conical in shape, with generalist forms having a circular cross-section, with medium to high crowns and a very acute apex that is slightly lingually curved. The lingual and labial surfaces are separated by smooth carinae, the labial surface being slightly more convex than the lingual face. The carinae show different degrees of development, being more marked in the smaller teeth (Figure 3.4). The transition between the tooth and root is almost unconstricted. In radicular view, the pulp cavity is short and shows subcircular morphology. Enamel ornamentation is formed by between five and 10 longitudinal and almost parallel ridges going straight from the base and converging slightly toward the apex. In some teeth, the longitudinal ridges next to the carinae of the lingual face seem to diverge.

Remarks. The dental morphologies described above are often attributed to Goniopholididae. Nevertheless, very similar teeth are also present in most neosuchians with generalist habits and diets, and they are also common in the anterior dental region of several crocodylomorphs with heterodont dentition, such as Bernissartia fagesii (Buffetaut and Ford, 1979) or Theriosuchus (Schwarz and Salisbury, 2005; Lauprasert et al., 2011; Martin et al., 2014). However, the high percentage of this form of tooth (46.30% of the sample) is unlikely to have come from only teeth from the anterior positions of heterodont crocodylomorphs, so there is likely at least one taxon present at La Cantalera with a generalist dentition, such as Goniopholididae.

Family BERNISSARTIIDAE? Dollo, 1883
Genus and species undetermined
Morphotype A
Figure 4.1-3

s figure4Referred material. 104 isolated teeth (28.49% of the sample = 365 teeth; MPZ 2014/472, 473, 474a, 474b and 843 through 901).

Description. Molariform or tribodont teeth, bulky, bulbous, rounded, with low crowns and a blunt apex. The teeth have circular, elliptical (Figure 4.2), kidney-shaped (Figure 4.3) or figure-eight-shaped cross-sections at their base (Figure 4.1). Certain specimens display stronger mediolateral compression than others (Figure 4.1), but they all show a rounded profile in lingual/labial view. The base of the crowns has a strong constriction. The pulp cavity, which can only be seen in a very few specimens because the root is not usually preserved, presents sub-ellipsoidal morphology, with the major axis running anteroposteriorly. Enamel ornamentation is formed by thin parallel ridges converging toward the apex. In most teeth, the presence of mesiodistal carinae is unlikely. However, in taller and less worn teeth a basiapical keel that is more marked towards the apex can be observed.

Within this morphotype there is some degree of variability according to the heterodont dentition observed in complete skulls and jaws of Bernissartia (Buffetaut and Ford, 1979; Buscalioni and Sanz, 1984, 1990b). The teeth from the posterior region of the tooth row have lower crowns, kidney-shaped or figure-eight-shaped sections and greater lateral compression (Figure 4.1, 3). By contrast, the anteriorly placed teeth have morphologies with taller crowns and sub-ellipsoidal to circular sections, without figure-eight-shaped sections (Figure 4.1). Almost all teeth have a worn occlusal surface.

Remarks. This morphotype has been assigned to Bernissartiidae? since this type of morphology is common in taxa of the same age, such as Bernissartia or Koumpiodontosuchus (Buffetaut and Ford, 1979; Sweetman et al., 2014). However, care must be taken with such specific assignments. This type of tooth, associated with a durophagous diet, is also present in other taxa not closely related with Bernissartiidae, such as Unasuchus, Acynodon, Allognathosuchus, Brachychampsa, Albertochampsa and the extant Osteolaemus (Buffetaut and Ford, 1979; Brinkmann, 1992; Buscalioni et al., 1997, 1999; Martin, 2007; Delfino et al., 2008). Therefore, the presence of this type of morphology may be more closely linked to dietary function than to phylogenetic relatedness (Buffetaut and Ford, 1979).

Morphotype B
Figure 4.4-6

Referred material. 62 isolated teeth (16.98% of the sample = 365 teeth; MPZ 2014/475, 476, 477a, 477b, 477c and 902 through 962).

Description. These teeth are short and conical with a triangular outline in lingual/labial view and strong mediolateral compression. The crowns are relatively low and small in size (1-2 mm). The labial surface is convex, and the lingual face is slightly flattened. The apex is slightly lingually curved, and there are mesial and distal carinae. The root contour is somewhat constricted, and the pulp cavity has subcircular to ellipsoidal morphology that is elongate in an anteroposterior direction. On the lingual surface, the base of the tooth has a slight concavity, giving it a somewhat kidney-shaped cross-section at its base. The ornamentation consists of thin parallel longitudinal ridges that converge towards the apex on both sides.

Remarks. In previous papers, such teeth have been attributed to forms close to Lisboasaurus and the LH-Crocodyliform (crocodyliform from Las Hoyas, Cuenca, Spain) (Canudo et al., 2010) which are two mesoeucrocodylians from the Kimmeridgian / Barremian of Spain and Portugal (Buscalioni et al., 1996; Ortega, 2004; Schwarz and Fechner, 2004, 2008). The triangular profile with laterally compressed crowns and the presence of a lingual groove at the base of the crown are indeed reminiscent of teeth present in Lisboasaurus and the LH-Crocodyliform. However, the teeth from Lisboasaurus and the LH-Crocodyliform have completely smooth enamel, lacking carinae and ornamentation (Schwarz and Fechner, 2008). The ornamentation of this dental morphotype from La Cantalera and its constriction at the base of the crown are also consistent with teeth attributed to Bernissartiidae. The greater crown height and the more conical shape could correspond to teeth from anterior positions in the jaw or to unworn teeth from the mid region in the dental series of Bernissartiidae (Buffetaut and Ford, 1979; Buscalioni and Sanz, 1990b; Sweetman et al., 2014).

Family ATOPOSAURIDAE Gervais, 1871
Genus THERIOSUCHUS Owen, 1879
Species undetermined
Figure 5

s figure5Referred material. 26 isolated teeth (7.12% of the sample = 365 teeth; MPZ 2014/478, 479, 480, 481, 482a, 482b, 482c and 821 through 841).

Description. The teeth show the typical autapomorphic characters observed in the genus Theriosuchus, with dentition that comprises labio-lingually compressed low-crowned, pseudocaniniform and lanceolate-shaped teeth, with mesial and distal carinae. The teeth are laterally compressed with differences in size. The labial surface is convex and flatter than the lingual face, with a slight curvature towards the lingual area near the apex. This morphotype shows morphological variability that can be related to different dental positions observed in skulls and jaws with preserved teeth of Theriosuchus (Owen, 1879; Brinkmann, 1992; Schwarz and Salisbury, 2005; Karl et al., 2006; Lauprasert et al., 2011; Martin et al., 2014). The teeth located in posterior positions of the tooth row (Figure 5.1-2, 5) are wider mesiodistally, highly laterally compressed, leaf-shaped and with a lower crown. The labial surfaces of these teeth are convex, and the lingual surfaces are flatter in the base and somewhat concave towards the apex. In addition, the radicular contour is slightly constricted, and the pulp cavity is completely flattened and elongated. By contrast, the teeth from anterior positions (Figure 5.3-4) are less laterally compressed, are lanceolate and have a considerably higher crown. They have mesial and distal carinae, but their torsion towards the lingual area is less pronounced. The pulp cavity is not as elongated or flattened, presenting an ellipsoidal morphology.

Remarks. Within this morphotype there exists great morphological variability associated with the enamel ornamentation and the presence or absence of true or false denticles on the carinae. Most teeth present longitudinal well-marked ridges, which are convergent in the central area of the tooth and diverge towards the carinae (Figure 5.1, 3, 5); others have fine anastomosed striae (Figure 5.2), and yet others have almost smooth enamel (Figure 5.4). This kind of tooth has been associated with insectivorous diets (Buscalioni and Sanz, 1988). The presence, absence and size of the denticles on the carinae seem to be related with the convergence of enamel ridges or grooves towards the carinae (“false ziphodont” according to Prasad and Broin, 2002). The size of the denticles are proportional to the thickness of the ridges. However, teeth with nearly smooth enamel may also have denticles (Figure 5.4). The presence of leaf-shaped or lanceolate teeth is probably related to the tooth position in the dental series, but the variation in the enamel ornamentation may be due to the presence of several taxa or great intraspecific variability. This kind of dental morphology is typical of atoposaurids such as Theriosuchus.

Clade MESOEUCROCODYLIA Whetstone and Whybrow, 1983 (sensu Benton and Clark, 1988)
Family, Genus and species undetermined
Figure 6.1

s figure6Referred material. 3 isolated teeth (0.82% of the sample = 365 teeth; MPZ 2014/483 and 842).

Description. Conical teeth with high crowns, a circular cross-section at the base and a sharp apex curved lingually and distally. Their relatively large size varies between 5 and 10 mm. The enamel ornamentation is somewhat variable and may be smooth or with fine longitudinal ridges. The lingual and labial surfaces are separated by carinae with true denticles (ziphodont), with the labial surface slightly more convex than the lingual face. A tooth is ziphodont when the denticles are not the result of the prolongation of the enamel ridges (Prasad and Broin, 2002).

Remarks. The term “ziphodont” has long been applied to Mesoeucrocodylia, including several genera from such a broad range of families that they may well not be monophyletic. Typical taxa with true ziphodont dentition are notosuchians, planocraniids and some peirosaurids. The use of ziphodont dentition as a criterion for the taxonomic classification of isolated teeth must thus be taken with caution since it is considered to be of limited value as phylogenetic information (Turner, 2006; Andrade and Bertini, 2008). This type of dentition was present in highly predatory terrestrial crocodylomorphs, thus having ecological rather than phylogenetic implications (Andrade and Bertini, 2008). For this reason, we have chosen to assign this morphotype to Mesoeucrocodylia indet.

Clade MESOEUCROCODYLIA Whetstone and Whybrow, 1983 (sensu Benton and Clark, 1988)
Family, Genus and species undetermined
Figure 6.2

Material. 1 isolated tooth (0.27% of the sample = 365 teeth; MPZ 2014/484).

Description. Relatively large tooth (about 1 cm) with spatulate morphology, mediolaterally compressed and with a low crown. The lingual and labial faces have two longitudinal grooves dividing the enamel into three bulbous surfaces that are more pronounced towards the base of the tooth. The enamel is smooth and has mesial and distal carinae with true denticles of variable size. One of the carinae forks into two at the base of the tooth.

Remarks. The overall tooth morphology resembles that of the spatulate teeth of Atoposauridae. However, we do not know other crocodylomorphs with this kind of enamel ornamentation and the presence of bifurcated carinae, so it has been assigned to Mesoeucrocodylia indet. Given that only one tooth with this strange morphology has been found, the carinae could be the result of some form of pathology.

PALAEOECOLOGY

The palaeontological site of La Cantalera was formed in a small basin, with no fluvial influence or allochthonous accumulation of sediments, and where most of the recovered fossils show no evidence of transport. La Cantalera has been interpreted as comprising floodplain deposits with ephemeral lacustrine episodes in an area of marshy vegetation (Aurell et al., 2004). The taphonomic, stratigraphic and sedimentological characteristics of La Cantalera indicate that the high concentration and biodiversity of vertebrates at the site is the result of sediment accumulation in a lentic ecosystem and not an accumulation caused by transport. It is therefore a site with a very concrete spatio-temporal distribution that shows the fauna that inhabited the area for a relatively short time interval (Canudo et al., 2010), and thus it is reasonable to assume sympatry of the species.

Given the faunal assemblage of a palaeontological site, it is possible to make predictions and interpretations about the type of ecosystem that occupied the area at the time (Buscalioni et al., 2008). The taxa of La Cantalera were divided into different groups (aquatic, amphibious and terrestrial) (Table 1) according to their dependence on water for extant wetlands (Valk, 2006; Buscalioni et al., 2008; Gasca et al., 2012). Gasca et al. (2012) proposed a simplified model based on Valk (2006), considering as aquatic taxa to organisms that cannot survive without the presence of water, such as fishes or aquatic algae. Amphibious taxa would be the species that spend part of their life cycle in water and part on terrestrial environments but they cannot survive if the wetland is totally drained, a good example would be the lissamphibians or some turtles and crocodiles. Terrestrial species are organisms that can be found both in wetlands and terrestrial environments and they can survive outside the wetland, such as lacertids, pterosaurs, dinosaurs and mammals. The results show that 16.21% of the organisms were aquatic, with two species of charophytes, two of gastropods, one of ostracod and just one osteichthyan fish. Amphibious organisms show a similar percentage at 18.91%; these are composed of at least four crocodylomorphs, two lissamphibians and one turtle (very scarce). Terrestrial organisms show the highest percentage at 64.86%, and these are made up of one lizard, two pterosaurs, 17 dinosaurs and four mammals.

The large number of terrestrial organisms in relation to the aquatic and amphibious fauna contrasts with the association expected in a wetland ecosystem, where aquatic and amphibious species are often the most abundant (Valk, 2006), as at other sites of similar age such as Buenache or Las Hoyas (Cuenca, Spain) (Buscalioni et al., 2008). The site of La Cantalera shows a faunal assemblage more similar to the site of Uña (Cuenca). However, the large number of terrestrial organisms in Uña is attributed to taphonomic and sedimentological factors, since the abundance of these organisms can be explained by transport and allochthonous sedimentation (Buscalioni et al., 2008). The scarce transport observed in La Cantalera, together with other factors such as the abundance of terrestrial organisms and the high number of replacement teeth of herbivorous dinosaurs, indicates that La Cantalera could have been an occasional feeding area for herbivorous dinosaurs, especially during wet periods (Ruíz-Omeñaca et al., 1997).

Another remarkable thing in La Cantalera is the small size of the recovered remains. Except for some large bones belonging to dinosaurs, most of the remains are small teeth. This also applies to the crocodylomorphs, with tooth heights of between 1 and 2 mm on average, and only a few specimens are less than 0.5 mm or around 1 cm in height. 52.60 % of the crocodylomorph teeth correspond to Bernissartiidae? and Atoposauridae. These taxa are characterized by their small body size, with a total length of around 50 cm in the adult stage and never exceeds 1 m in length (Buscalioni and Sanz, 1990a, 1990b, 1990c; Schwarz-Wings et al., 2009). Despite their small body size, the teeth of adult atoposaurids and bernissartiids were bigger than those from La Cantalera (average size of 1.79 mm for Theriosuchus sp. and 1.31 mm for Bernissartiidae?, see Appendix) and thus most of the teeth from La Cantalera likely belong to juveniles. For example, the teeth from adult specimens of Theriosuchus pusillus Owen, 1879 or Theriosuchus sympiestodon Martin, Rabi, Csiki-Sava and Vasile, 2014 range between 2 mm (posterior maxillary teeth) to 10 mm (enlarged fourth maxillary tooth) in height, while young individuals range between 1 mm (posterior maxillary teeth) to 3.5 mm (enlarged fourth maxillary tooth) in height; and the teeth from adult specimens of bernissartiids such as Koumpiodontosuchus or the holotype of Bernissartia from Belgium range between 3 mm to 6 mm in height (measurements taken from the figures of Owen (1879), Clark (1986) and Martin et al. (2014) for Theriosuchus ; from Sweetman et al. (2014) for Koumpiodontosuchus ; and firsthand measurements taken by us for Bernissartia). Therefore, the teeth from adult specimens of Theriosuchus or Bernissatiidae are above the 2 mm in height, while in juvenile specimens are usually less than 2 mm in height, with the exception of the 4th enlarged maxillary tooth which is usually greater than 2 mm in height. Given the small size of most of the teeth from La Cantalera attributed to Goniopholididae? (average size = 2.28 mm, see Appendix), the presence of adult goniopholidids is ruled out, since this is a group that can reach up to 4 m of body length with teeth with an average size of 13 mm in the adult stage (Buscalioni et al., 2008). This argument would be strengthened because immature specimens of dwarf goniopholidids such as Nannosuchus gracilidens Owen, 1879 have teeth that vary between 2.5 to 7 mm in height (measurements taken from the plate 44 of Owen (1879)), which is the approximate size range observed in La Cantalera. The high concentration of probable juvenile crocodylomorphs and the abundant crocodylomorph eggshell fragments (Canudo et al., 2010; Moreno-Azanza et al., 2013) at the site of La Cantalera could be explained by the presence of a nearby nesting area. Extant crocodylomorphs, the hatchlings and juveniles usually remain around the nesting area and nearby areas with the mother for weeks or even until two seasons before dispersing; freshwater wetland areas/grasslands are the most common places for nesting (Brazaities and Watanabe, 2011).

CONCLUSIONS

La Cantalera has at least six morphotypes that could correspond to at least four different crocodylomorph taxa (Goniopholididae?, Bernissartiidae?, Theriosuchus and an undetermined ziphodont). Due to the high variability within each morphotype, especially those assigned to Theriosuchus, the presence of more than four different crocodylomorph species seems the most likely hypothesis.

The site has a similar crocodylomorph assemblage to other European Lower Cretaceous sites such as Bornholm (Denmark) and Buenache de la Sierra (Cuenca), where there is also an association of Goniopholididae, Bernissartiidae, Atoposauridae and an undetermined ziphodont (Buscalioni et al., 2008; Schwarz‐Wings et al., 2009). We prefer not to assign the bizarre tooth with bifurcated carinae to any particular taxon, because there is only one isolated specimen with this morphology and it could be the result of pathology.

This site is also characterized by the absence of large individuals and by the presence of teeth with a wide variety of morphologies. Such tooth disparity has been explained in terms of a trophic diversity ranging from generalist to insectivorous and durophagous habits (Buscalioni and Sanz, 1988). Furthermore, this rich biodiversity could be due to the fact that in marsh ecosystems, especially during dry periods, vertebrates tend to occupy and move to areas that remain flooded, where water and food are more abundant. Another hypothesis that could explain the abundance of small teeth and the presence of crocodylomorph eggshell fragments is that La Cantalera was occasionally used as a nesting area

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

This work forms part of the European Regional Development Fund, the Government of Aragón ("Grupos Consolidados" and "Dirección General de Patrimonio Cultural") and the program Formación del Profesorado Universitario (FPU) subsidized by the Spanish Ministry of Education, Culture and Sports. The comments of Alexander Hastings have improved the original manuscript. Rupert Glasgow edited the text in English.

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