Christopher A Brochu

University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA, USA

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Publications (6)23.07 Total impact

  • Source
    Article: A new horned crocodile from the Plio-Pleistocene hominid sites at Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania.
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    ABSTRACT: The fossil record reveals surprising crocodile diversity in the Neogene of Africa, but relationships with their living relatives and the biogeographic origins of the modern African crocodylian fauna are poorly understood. A Plio-Pleistocene crocodile from Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania, represents a new extinct species and shows that high crocodylian diversity in Africa persisted after the Miocene. It had prominent triangular "horns" over the ears and a relatively deep snout, these resemble those of the recently extinct Malagasy crocodile Voay robustus, but the new species lacks features found among osteolaemines and shares derived similarities with living species of Crocodylus. The holotype consists of a partial skull and skeleton and was collected on the surface between two tuffs dated to approximately 1.84 million years (Ma), in the same interval near the type localities for the hominids Homo habilis and Australopithecus boisei. It was compared with previously-collected material from Olduvai Gorge referable to the same species. Phylogenetic analysis places the new form within or adjacent to crown Crocodylus. The new crocodile species was the largest predator encountered by our ancestors at Olduvai Gorge, as indicated by hominid specimens preserving crocodile bite marks from these sites. The new species also reinforces the emerging view of high crocodylian diversity throughout the Neogene, and it represents one of the few extinct species referable to crown genus Crocodylus.
    PLoS ONE 01/2010; 5(2):e9333. · 4.09 Impact Factor
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    Article: A correction corrected: consensus over the meaning of Crocodylia and why it matters.
    Systematic Biology 10/2009; 58(5):537-43. · 10.23 Impact Factor
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    Article: Are crocodiles really monophyletic?--Evidence for subdivisions from sequence and morphological data.
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    ABSTRACT: Recently, the phylogenetic placement of the African slender snouted crocodile, Crocodylus cataphractus, has come under scrutiny and herein we address this issue using molecular and morphological techniques. Although it is often recognized as being a "basal" form, morphological studies have traditionally placed C. cataphractus within the genus Crocodylus, while molecular studies have suggested that C. cataphractus is very distinct from other Crocodylus. To address the relationship of this species to its congeners we have sequenced portions of two nuclear genes (C-mos 302bp and ODC 294bp), and two mitochondrial genes (ND6-tRNA(glu)-cytB 347bp and control region 457bp). Analyses of these molecular datasets, both as individual gene sequences and as concatenated sequences, support the hypothesis that C. cataphractus is not a member of Crocodylus or Osteolaemus. Examination of 165 morphological characters supports and strengthens our resurrection of an historic genus, Mecistops (Gray 1844) for cataphractus.
    Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 05/2006; 39(1):16-32. · 3.61 Impact Factor
  • Article: Calibration age and quartet divergence date estimation.
    Christopher A Brochu
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    ABSTRACT: The date of a single divergence point--between living alligators and crocodiles--was estimated with quartet dating using calibrations of widely divergent ages. For five mitochondrial sequence datasets, there is a clear relationship between calibration age and quartet estimate--quartets based on two relatively recent calibrations support younger divergence estimates than do quartets based on two older calibrations. Some of the estimates supported by young quartets are impossibly young and exclude the first appearance of the group in the fossil record as too old. The older estimates--those based on two relatively old calibrations--may be overestimates, and those based on one old and one recent calibration support divergence estimates very close to fossil data. This suggests that quartet dating methods may be most effective when calibrations are applied from different parts of a clade's history.
    Evolution 07/2004; 58(6):1375-82. · 5.15 Impact Factor
  • Article: When clocks (and communities) collide: estimating divergence time from molecules and the fossil record /
    Christopher A Brochu, Colin D. Sumrall
  • Article: Phylogenetic nomenclature and paleontology
    Christopher A Brochu, Colin D. Sumrall