Environment Trimerorhachis was probably a fully aquatic temnospondyl. Like most dvinosaurs, it had external gills. The
interclavicle and
clavicle of the
pectoral girdle are both very large, a feature that is shared with other aquatic temnospondyls. Many bones are poorly
ossified, indicating that
Trimerorhachis was poorly suited for movement on land.
Trimerorhachis was probably an aquatic predator that fed on fish and small vertebrates. During the Early Permian, the area of New Mexico and Texas was a broad coastal plain that stretched from an ocean in the south to highlands in the north. Other common animals that lived alongside
Trimerorhachis included
lungfish and
crossopterygians, the
lepospondyl Diplocaulus, and the large sail-backed
synapsid Dimetrodon.
Brooding Small bones that likely belong to immature
Trimerorhachis individuals have been found in the
pharyngeal pouches of larger
Trimerorhachis specimens. At first these bones were thought to be part of the
branchial arches which surround the pouch, or remains of prey that had just been eaten before the animal died. If
Trimerorhachis was a
mouth brooder, the closest living analogue would be
Darwin's Frog, which broods its young in its
vocal sac. The bones in
Trimerorhachis belong to juveniles that were much larger than those of Darwin's Frog, however. The young of the
Gastric-brooding frogs of Australia were comparable in size to those of
Trimerorhachis but were brooded in the stomach rather than the throat. The number of brooded young in Darwin's Frog and the Gastric-brooding frogs is also much higher than that of
Trimerorhachis, as only a few individuals can be distinguished in the collection of bones. The only living amphibian that raises similarly sized young is the
Golden coquí, although it does so through
ovovivipary rather than brooding. Another possible explanation for the small bones is that they were originally located in the throat and were pushed into the pharyngeal pouch during fossilization. If this was the case,
Trimerorhachis may have eaten its young instead of brooding them. This type of cannibalism is widespread in living amphibians, and most likely occurred among some prehistoric amphibians as well. ==See also==