Voay

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Voay
Temporal range: PleistoceneHolocene, 0.126–0 Ma
Voay robustus.JPG
Skull, American Museum of Natural History
Scientific classification e
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Superorder: Crocodylomorpha
Order: Crocodilia
Subfamily: Crocodylinae
Genus: †Voay
Brochu, 2007
Type species
<templatestyles src="Noitalic/styles.css"/>Voay robustus
(Grandidier & Vaillant, 1872)
Synonyms

Crocodylus robustus Grandidier & Vaillant, 1872

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Voay is an extinct genus of crocodile from Madagascar and includes only one species—V. robustus. Numerous subfossils have been found, including complete skulls as well as vertebrae and osteoderms from such places as Ambolisatra and Antsirabe. The genus is thought to have become extinct relatively recently during the Holocene. It has even been suggested to have disappeared in the extinction event that wiped out much of the endemic megafauna such as the elephant bird following the arrival of humans to Madagascar around 2000 years ago.[1]

Reconstruction of V. robustus

Its size, stature, and presumed behavior is similar to the modern Nile crocodile (Crocodylus niloticus). Because V. robustus shared so many similarities with the Nile crocodile there must have been a great deal of interspecific competition for resources between the two crocodile genera if they were to have coexisted with one another. It has recently been proposed that the Nile crocodile only migrated to the island from mainland Africa after V. robustus had gone extinct in Madagascar.[2]

Description

One unusual feature of V. robustus that distinguishes it from other crocodilians is the presence of prominent "horns" extending from the posterior portion of the skull. They are actually the posterolaterally extended corners of the squamosal bone. Other related crocodilians such as Aldabrachampsus also had similar bony projections, although in Aldabrachampsus these projections were more like crests than horns.[3] Another diagnostic characteristic is the near-exclusion of the nasals from the external naris. It had a shorter and deeper snout than the extant Crocodylus niloticus, as well as relatively robust limbs. The osteoderms had tall keels and were dorsally symmetrical with curved lateral margins, running the entire length of the postcranial body.[4]

V. robustus has been estimated to have obtained lengths up to 5 m (16.4 ft) and a weight of 170 kg (375 lbs).[5] These estimates suggest that V. robustus was the largest predator to have ever existed in Madagascar in recent times.

Phylogenetics

When V. robustus was first described in 1872, it was originally assigned to the genus Crocodylus.[6] However, it is now known to have had more in common with the extant Osteolaemus, or dwarf crocodile, than Crocodylus. Some features it shares with Osteolaemus include a depressed pterygoid surface that forms a choanal "neck" on the palate. Because it was not close enough to be placed in the same genus as the dwarf crocodile, it was assigned to the new genus in 2007. Before this reassignment, the species was considered by some to be synonymous with Crocodylus niloticus. However, this was most likely due to a misinterpretation of remains from the living C. niloticus with V. robustus and the poor description of the original material from which the species was described.[7][8]

References

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  6. Grandidier, A. and Vaillant, L. (1872). Sur le crocodile fossile d'Amboulintsatre (Madagascar). Comptes Rendus de l'Académie des Sciences Paris 75:150–151.
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  8. Brochu, C. A. and Storrs, G. W. (1995). The giant dwarf crocodile: a reappraisal of ‘Crocodylus’ robustus from the Quaternary of Madagascar. In: Patterson, Goodman, and Sedlock, eds., Environmental Change in Madagascar. p. 70.