|      A massive extinction between the Triassic and Jurassic    eras paved the way for the rise of the crocodiles,    new research suggests. The researchers, who    detail their work today (March 26) in the journal Biology Letters, found that    although nearly all the crocodilelike archosaurs, known as pseudosuchia, died    off about 201 million years ago, the one lineage that survived soon    diversified to occupy land and sea. The lineage included the ancestors of all    modern crocodiles and alligators. "Even though almost    all the lineages except for one was extinct, the remaining survivors still    did well in terms of morphology and body plans and the whole morphological diversity," said study co-author    Olja Toljagi?, an evolutionary biology researcher who was at the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich at the time of    the study. Understanding the traits    that allowed certain lineages to thrive could one day help paleontologists    untangle one of the greatest mysteries: how dinosaurs survived the extinction    unscathed and took over Earth. Dinosaur    counterparts During the Triassic period, two lines of archosaurs lived in the    same environment, which included dinosaurs, and the pseudosuchians, a large    group of crocodilelike creatures that had short necks, long snouts and    massive skulls. But around 201 million    years ago, volcanic activity or a meteor killed off half the known species on    Earth. Just one lineage of pseudosuchians, called the crocodylomorphs,    survived. That branch would ultimately give rise to modern-day crocodiles and alligators. Crocodile line In order to find out what    happened to the pseudosuchians during the mass extinction, Toljagi? and her    colleague Richard Butler analyzed previous research data on pseudosuchians'    skull characteristics, which could provide details about species diversity. After doing a systematic    analysis, the team found that the single surviving branch not only survived    the extinction, but showed great diversity within a few million years after    the extinction. These diversified crocodilelike creatures fanned out into different    environments ? such as swamps, rivers and oceans ? during the Triassic    period. Ecological    opportunity The findings suggest that    the extinction allowed crocodiles to flourish, said Stephen Brusatte, a    paleontologist at the University of Edinburgh, who was not involved in the    study. "That extinction    seems to have had a major effect by knocking off many species and then giving    new species a chance," Brusatte told LiveScience. The next step is to try    to piece together a similarly detailed picture for dinosaurs around the same    time in order to understand how dinosaurs survived the extinction, he said. Copyright    2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This    material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.  |    
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