04/08/2025 Hovasaurus
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04/08/2025 Hovasaurus
Portrait of the diapsid reptile Youngina capensis from the Late Permian of the Karoo basin (South Africa). This is the second drawing in Paint after Vastatosaurus) Angina belongs to the Younginidae family, which was assigned to the order of the so-called Eosuchians, a group of small Permian-Triassic diapsids that became a wastebasket of not too closely related species. This reptile is known from several specimens, some of which were previously considered separate genera. Its anatomy combines features of primitive diapsids and more progressive groups. Being a small creature (the length of the skull is 5 cm with a total length of 30 cm), angina hunted insects in the shadow of the prevailing therapsids at that time.
Paint, 2024.
The Permian-Triassic extinction 252 million years ago was the most severe mass extinction in Earth's history, so incredibly devastating that it's been nicknamed the "Great Dying" – but there were still some animals that somehow just… didn't seem to really notice it at all.
And one of these surprisingly resilient species was Hovasaurus boulei.
It was part of a group known as the tangasaurids, a fairly early evolutionary branch of diapsid reptiles from Madagascar and East Africa that originated sometime in the mid-Permian, just before the common ancestor of modern lizards and archosaurs.
Hovasaurus lived in Madagascar both just before and for some time after the Great Dying, dating to around 252-247 million years ago. Growing up to about 90cm long (~3'), it was one of the largest tangasaurids and was also highly specialized for aquatic life in freshwater rivers, with an eel-like tail twice the length of the rest of its body and heavy thickened ribs.
Hundreds of fossils have been found representing life stages from hatchling to adult, and juvenile Hovasaurus actually seem to have been almost fully aquatic – they had proportionally shorter limbs and may have behaved similarly to modern sea turtles, crawling into the water shortly after hatching and only returning to land as adults once they had longer better-developed legs.
Many fossils also preserve clusters of pebbles in their abdominal cavities, which are thought to have been used as extra ballast to help weigh them down in the water when hunting small fish and invertebrates.
It's not entirely clear why these odd little aquatic reptiles were apparently unaffected by the Great Dying. Perhaps, much like the many freshwater species that survived though the later end-Cretaceous mass extinction, Hovasaurus was simply very good at dealing with sudden changes in its environment and food availability due to the variability of river habitats, and was able to weather though the worst of the extinction without much trouble.
Or maybe it was just one of the lucky ones.
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Hovasaurus! I've never even heard of this thing! : o
The Hova lizard, Hovasaurus (1926)
Phylum : Chordata Class : Reptilia Family : Tangasauridae Genus : Hovasaurus Species : H. boulei
Late Permian (253,8 - 249,7 Ma)
50 cm long (size)
Madagascar (map)
Hovasaurus was a diapsid reptile that developed special adaptations for an aquatic lifestyle. The toes of the feet were long and had webbing between them to make them work as flippers. The caudal vertebrae are extended up and below to support a vertically flattened tail. This would have provided a strong method of propulsion while swimming. Skin impressions of Hovasaurus show reptilian scales as seen in lizards.
Interestingly, Hovasaurus remains have been found to have concentrations of small stones where their stomachs would be, suggesting that these reptiles swallowed them in order to increase buoyancy.