Sadly Secodontosaurus has been ill advisedly released in Australia's Kakadu National Park. Authorities were positive they would eat the booming cane toad population. They did in captivity. For the foreseeable future tourists are banned from entering the park.
Cladistically, they are not closely related to modern reptiles, and are more closely related modern mammals. But for all intents and purposes, before the cynodontian transition into mammalian characteristics, a lot of them were reptilian, and all the ones presented in this video were predominantly reptilian. So, I have no issue calling synapsids 'reptiles', especially the ones that were surely not in transition yet.
Sadly Secodontosaurus has been ill advisedly released in Australia's Kakadu National Park. Authorities were positive they would eat the booming cane toad population. They did in captivity. For the foreseeable future tourists are banned from entering the park.
Good to have you back up and running again.
Good to be back!
Ah finally a new video! Very interesting topic :)
Yup, and more to come!
Not all the animals are just reptiles so are reptile like mammal!!
Mammal like reptiles***
@@CromoPaleoShow stem-mammals
Reptomammals
@@CromoPaleoShow that term is outdated, it would be more accurate, even if not 100%, to call non mammalian synapsids "reptile like mammals"
But man they are not reptiles they are synapsids
Cladistically, they are not closely related to modern reptiles, and are more closely related modern mammals.
But for all intents and purposes, before the cynodontian transition into mammalian characteristics, a lot of them were reptilian, and all the ones presented in this video were predominantly reptilian. So, I have no issue calling synapsids 'reptiles', especially the ones that were surely not in transition yet.
@@jonxyrussims5828 cladistics are the best for describing animals, making birds reptiles & dimetrodon not a reptile
wait wasn't ophiacodon from the carboniferous
Sure was, but it also live on into the early to mid Permian.
ah i see now
Amazon videos
Some of them are Technically Not Reptiles, in fact they are more closely related to Mammals than any Reptile
First :D
Jeez you were quick!