Bauriids belong to a large
clade or evolutionary grouping of therapsids called Therocephalia that is closely related to mammals (mammals are part of Cynodontia, the
sister taxon of Therocephalia in most studies). Within Therocephalia, bauriids are part of a subgroup called
Eutherocephalia, which includes all but the most
basal therocephalians. Nested within Eutherocephalia is a clade called
Baurioidea, of which bauriids are the most
derived members (baurioids that fell outside Bauriidae were traditionally all placed within a group called Scaloposauria, but the group is now thought to be a
paraphyletic assemblage of basal baurioids). The inter-group relationships of Bauriidae are uncertain. Battail and Surkov (2003) split it into two subfamilies:
Nothogomphodontinae, which included the genus
Nothogomphodon; and
Bauriinae, which included all other bauriids. In his
phylogenetic analysis of therocephalians, Huttenlocker (2014) found support for
Nothogomphodon being more basal than other bauriids, but also found a clade containing
Ordosiodon and
Hazhenia (Chinese therocephalians that had previously been grouped together under the family
Ordosiidae) to be the sister group of these other bauriids, with
Nothogomphodon occupying a more basal position. Huttenlocker therefore restricted the name Bauriidae to the sister group of Ordosiidae. The
cladogram below is modified from Huttenlocker (2014), showing the position of Bauriidae within Therocephalia and the interrelationships of bauriids supported by his analysis: }} ==References==