Characteristics
Some, if not all lissamphibia share the following characteristics. Some of these apply to the soft body parts, and hence don't appear in fossils. However, the skeletal characteristics also appear in several types of Palaeozoic amphibians:
- Double or paired occipital condyle
- Two types of skin glands (mucous & granular)
- Fat bodies associated with gonads
- Double-channeled sensory papillae in the inner ear
- Green rods (a special type of visual cell, unknown in caecilians)
- Ribs do not encircle body
- Ability to elevate the eye (with levator bulbi muscle)
- Forced pump respiratory mechanism
- Cylindrical centra (the main body of the vertebra; cylindrical centra are also found in several groups of early tetrapods)
- Pedicellate teeth (the crown of the teeth is separated from the root by a zone of fibrous tissue; also found in some Dissorophoidea; the teeth of some fossil salamanders are not pedicellate)
- Bicuspid teeth (two cusps per tooth, also found in juvenile dissorophoids)
- Operculum (small bone in the skull, linked to shoulder girdle by the opercularis muscle; perhaps involved in hearing and balance; absent in caecilians and some salamanders, fused to the stapes (ear bones) in most anurans)
- Loss of posterior skull bones (also in Microsauria and Dissorophoidea)
- Small, widely separated pterygoids (also found in Temnospondyli and Nectridea)
- Wide cultriform process of the parasphenoid (also found in some Microsauria (Rhynchonchos) and Lysorophia)
Read more about this topic: Lissamphibia
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