Teeth and diet Like other sphenodonts, opisthodonts had
acrodont teeth which grew directly from the bone. They had one row of teeth on the lower jaw and two rows on the roof of the mouth. When processing food, their mandibular teeth would have slid between the outer (
maxillary) teeth and inner (
palatine) teeth. Some opisthodonts, such as
Sphenotitan, also had clusters of small teeth on the
pterygoid at the center of the mouth roof. Opisthodont teeth were wide, numerous, and tightly-packed for grinding and shredding tough plant matter. Although wide shredding teeth are also known in a few other sphenodontians, such as
Clevosaurus and
Pelecymala, the most diverse and long-lasting group of herbivorous rhynchocephalians were the opisthodonts. Some more generalized opisthodonts, such as
Opisthias, were probably more capable of
omnivory than the advanced eilenodonts. The
mandibular teeth of opisthodonts were characteristically edged with forward-pointing
flanges. Although
Sphenotitan only had flanges on the medial (inside) edge, other eilenodonts had flanges on the lateral (outside) edge as well, making their teeth anteriorly concave and overlapping. The maxillary teeth, on the other hand, had long flanges aligned in a posteromedial-anterolateral direction. Opisthodonts lacked dental regionalization, meaning that all of their teeth had the same form and they did not have caniform or hatchling teeth like other sphenodonts. • A rounded and well-developed mandibular symphysis. • A well-developed, anteroposteriorly projecting mandibular spur. • No dental regionalization in adults or juveniles. • Extensive posteromedial/anterolateral flanges on the posterior maxillary teeth. • Anteromedial flanges on the mandibular teeth. • A short or absent premaxillary process of the maxilla. • The posterodorsal process of the premaxilla being present. In addition, most opisthodonts also had dental ridges (or crests) on their mandibular teeth. The most advanced opisthodonts belong to the
subfamily (or
tribe) Eilenodontinae (or Eilenodontini). Most eilenodonts were large, stockily built members of the clade, with massive jaws, low and overlapping teeth, and a large hooked "beak"(a rhynchocephalian feature). Their skulls were reminiscent of rodent skulls, leading some to presume that they were gregarious burrowers which fed on tough vegetation. The largest known terrestrial rhynchocephalian was an eilenodont,
Priosphenodon avelasi. == Classification ==