Initial titanosaurian identification In 2017,
Triunfosaurus was placed in the clade
Titanosauria as defined by Wilson and Upchurch in 2003, which is supported by the articulations of its
haemal arches having two distinct surfaces as in other titanosaurs. Additionally, the short shaft of the
ischium - and indeed the proportions of the bone in general - are quite similar to that of the similarly basal
Andesaurus. However, the straight vertical
neural spines warrant a more derived position than either
Andesaurus or
Mendozasaurus, while the relative shortness of the haemal canal relative to the rest of the haemal arch distinguishes
Triunfosaurus from
Andesaurus and other titanosaurs. The topology recovered, based on the dataset of Carballido & Sander, is reproduced below. Nevertheless, an alternate hypothesis involving dispersal out of
Europe remains plausible.
Reassignment as an indeterminate somphospondylan In a subsequent redescription of the
somphospondylan Austrosaurus, Steven Poropat and colleagues raised a number of objections to the titanosaurian status of
Triunfosaurus. Poropat
et al. noted that the furrow separating the arch into two surfaces, used by Carvalho
et al. to assign
Triunfosaurus to the Titanosauria, is likewise present in the non-titanosaur
somphospondylans Phuwiangosaurus and
Tangvayosaurus. They remarked that the short haemal canal directly contradicts the Titanosauria as defined by Wilson in 2002, Additionally, the assignment of the caudal vertebrae to the middle of the tail was also questioned by Poropat
et al.. Features in these vertebrae that are unusual for middle caudal vertebrae include the prominent transverse processes bearing deep diapophyses (articulations with the ribs), the pronounced prezygodiapophyseal laminae connecting the prezygapophyses and transverse processes, the well-developed spinoprezygapophyseal laminae connecting the prezygapophyses and neural spines, the deep indentations on the outer margins of the bottom of the centra, and the postzygapophyseal facet joints extending backwards from the midpoint of the side of the centra. The size of the transverse processes suggests that the vertebrae actually originate from the front of the tail, making their association with the ischium questionable due to their overall small size. For these reasons, Poropat
et al. reassigned
Triunfosaurus to the Somphospondyli, being unable to confidently support its titanosaurian affinities due to its problematic nature. ==Paleoecology==