Thursday, 5 August 2021

VOAY ROBUSTUS

This big beastie is Voay robustus. You likely met him first as Crocodylus‭ (‬C.‭ ‬robustus‭) from his original naming by Grandidier and Vaillant in‭ 1872. 

Looking more closely at his remains revealed that he is nearer in design to the dwarf crocodile Osteolaemus. 

The type series cannot be identified, but the original description includes details consistent with known specimens that almost certainly pertain to the same species. 

It had a prominent triangular ‘horn’ on the posterolateral corner of each squamosal; near-exclusion of the nasals from the external naris; constricted supratemporal fenestral rims; a dorsoventrally deep snout; a constricted external mandibular fenestra in which the surangular–angular suture emerges from the posterior rather than posteroventral margin; and robust limb and limb-girdle elements. 

It shares with Osteolaemus, and with several extinct crocodylids from the Neogene of Africa, a depressed surface of the pterygoid around the internal choana forming a choanal ‘neck’. It cannot be referred to as Crocodylus and a new praenomen, Voay, was established for its reception. 

In 2007, Christopher‭ ‬A.‭ ‬Brochu created a new genus, Voay, and this fellow became Voay robustus. Christopher published his work in the Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society in Volume 150, Issue 4, August 2007, Pages 835-863. Voay lived into the Holocene of Madagasgar, perhaps meeting some of our relatives 2,000 years ago. Voay was replaced by Crocodylus niloticus in Madagascar as they moved into the niche left by Voay's ultimate demise. 

https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1096-3642.2007.00315.x