Enaliosuchus
Enaliosuchus is a dubious genus of extinct marine crocodyliform within the family Metriorhynchidae that lived during the Valanginian stage of the Early Cretaceous. It is known from fossil remains found in France and Germany and it was first described in 1883.
Only the type species is known, which is E. macrospondylus.
Etymology
The name Enaliosuchus means "Marine crocodile", and is derived from the Greek Enalios- and -suchos.Discovery and naming
The holotype, specimen MB.R.1943.1–16, consists of an atlas-axis complex, three post-axial cervical vertebrae, several dorsal vertebrae, a caudal vertebra, an incomplete femur and a fragmentary sacral rib, and it was discovered in the Stadthagen Formation in Germany. The species Enaliosuchus macrospondylus was then named for this specimen by Koken.Isolated teeth were subsequently found across Germany and have been assigned to Enaliosuchus, and a partial specimen discovered in the Campylotoxus Zone of France was assigned to Enaliosuchus macrospondylus by Hua et al..
Description
Enaliosuchus was a carnivore that spent much, if not all, its life out at sea. No Enaliosuchus eggs or nest have been discovered, so little is known of the reptile's lifecycle, unlike other large marine reptiles of the Mesozoic, such as plesiosaurs or ichthyosaurs which are known to give birth to live young out at sea. Where Enaliosuchus mated, whether on land or at sea, is currently unknown.Species
The species within Enaliosuchus include :- E. macrospondylus: type species from France and Germany of the Early Cretaceous.
In 2024, Enaliosuchus schroederi, from Germany, which was previously believed to likely be a junior synonym of E. macrospondylus, was moved to the new genus Enalioetes in 2024.