Diapsids ("two arches") are a clade of sauropsids, distinguished from more primitive eureptiles by the presence of two holes, known as temporal fenestrae, in each side of their skulls. The earliest traditionally identified diapsids, the araeoscelidians, appeared about three hundred million years ago during the late Carboniferous period. All diapsids other than the most primitive ones in the clade Araeoscelidia are often placed into the clade Neodiapsida. The diapsids are extremely diverse, and include birds and all modern reptile groups, including turtles, which were historically thought to lie outside the group. All modern reptiles and birds are placed within the neodiapsid subclade Sauria. Although some diapsids have lost either one hole (lizards), or both holes (snakes and turtles), or have a heavily restructured skull (modern birds), they are still classified as diapsids based on their ancestry. At least 17,084 species of diapsid animals are extant: 9,159 birds, and 7,925 snakes, lizards, tuatara, turtles, and crocodiles.

Characteristics

Diagram of the diapsid skull with temporal openings, unlike in anapsids

The name Diapsida means "two arches", and diapsids are traditionally classified based on their two ancestral skull openings (temporal fenestrae) posteriorly above and below the eye. This arrangement allows for the attachment of larger, stronger jaw muscles, and enables the jaw to open more widely. A more obscure ancestral characteristic is a relatively long lower arm bone (the radius) compared to the upper arm bone (humerus). [citation needed]

Basal non-saurian neodiapsids were ancestrally lizard-like, but basal non-saurian neodiapsids include aquatic/amphibious taxa (Claudiosaurus and some tangasaurids) the gliding lizard-like Weigeltisauridae, as well as the Triassic chameleon-like drepanosaurs.

Classification

Diapsids were originally classified as one of four subclasses of the class Reptilia, all of which were based on the number and arrangement of openings in the skull. The other three subclasses were Synapsida (one opening low on the skull, for the "mammal-like reptiles"), Anapsida (no skull opening, including turtles and their relatives), and Euryapsida (one opening high on the skull, including many prehistoric marine reptiles). With the advent of phylogenetic nomenclature, this system of classification was heavily modified. Today, the synapsids are often not considered true reptiles, while Euryapsida were found to be an unnatural assemblage of diapsids that had lost one of their skull openings. Genetic studies and the discovery of the Triassic Pappochelys have shown that this is also the case in turtles, which are actually heavily modified diapsids. In phylogenetic systems, birds (descendants of traditional diapsid reptiles) are also considered to be members of this group.

Some modern studies of reptile relationships have preferred to use the name "diapsid" to refer to the crown group of all modern diapsid reptiles but not their extinct relatives. However, many researchers have also favored a more traditional definition that includes the prehistoric araeoscelidians. In 1991, Laurin defined Diapsida as a clade, "the most recent common ancestor of araeoscelidians, lepidosaurs, and archosaurs, and all its descendants".

The clade Neodiapsida was given a phylogenetic definition by Laurin in 1991. He defined it as the branch-based clade containing all animals more closely related to "Younginiformes" (later, more specifically, emended to Youngina capensis) than to Petrolacosaurus (representing Araeoscelidia). The earliest known neodiapsids like Orovenator are known from the Early Permian, around 290 million years ago.

All genetic studies have supported the hypothesis that turtles are cladistically diapsid reptiles despite being morphologically anapsid, most placing them as more closely related to living archosaurs (including crocodiles and birds) than to lepidosaurs (lizards, snakes, etc).

Modern reptiles and birds are placed within the neodiapsid subclade Sauria, defined as the last common ancestor of Lepidosauria (which includes lizards, snakes and the tuatara), and Archosauria (which includes crocodilians and dinosaurs, including birds, among others).

A cladistic analysis by Laurin and Piñeiro (2017) recovers Parareptilia as part of Diapsida, with pareiasaurs, turtles, millerettids, and procolophonoids recovered as more derived than the basal diapsid Younginia. A 2020 study by David P. Ford and Roger B. J. Benson also recovered Parareptilia as deeply nested within Diapsida, as the sister group to Neodiapsida. They united this relationship between Parareptilia and Neodiapsida in the new clade Neoreptilia, defining it as the last common ancestor and all descendants of Procolophon trigoniceps and Youngina capensis. However, this excludes mesosaurs, who were found to be basal among the sauropsids. Other recent studies have found the more traditional arrangement of parareptiles being outside of Diapsida.

The position of the highly derived Mesozoic marine reptile groups Thalattosauria, Ichthyosauromorpha and Sauropterygia within Neodiapsida is uncertain, and they may lie within Sauria.

In the 2022 and 2023 studies, Araeoscelidia was found to have no close relationship with Neodiapsida and was not even part of Amniota in one study's topology.

Relationships

Below are cladograms showing the relations of the major groups of diapsids.

Cladogram after Bickelmann et al., 2009 and Reisz et al., 2011:

SauropsidaParareptiliaMillerettidaeEunotosaurusHallucicraniaLanthanosuchidaeProcolophoniaProcolophonoideaPareiasauromorpha EureptiliaCaptorhinidae RomeriidaPaleothyris DiapsidaAraeoscelidia NeodiapsidaOrovenatorLanthanolaniaTangasauridaeYounginidaeClaudiosaurusPalaeagamaSaurosternonCoelurosauravusThalattosauriaHupehsuchiaIchthyopterygia Sauria Lepidosauromorpha Archosauromorpha
ParareptiliaMillerettidaeEunotosaurusHallucicraniaLanthanosuchidaeProcolophoniaProcolophonoideaPareiasauromorpha
Millerettidae
Millerettidae
EunotosaurusHallucicraniaLanthanosuchidaeProcolophoniaProcolophonoideaPareiasauromorpha
Eunotosaurus
Eunotosaurus
HallucicraniaLanthanosuchidaeProcolophoniaProcolophonoideaPareiasauromorpha
Lanthanosuchidae
ProcolophoniaProcolophonoideaPareiasauromorpha
Procolophonoidea
Pareiasauromorpha
EureptiliaCaptorhinidae RomeriidaPaleothyris DiapsidaAraeoscelidia NeodiapsidaOrovenatorLanthanolaniaTangasauridaeYounginidaeClaudiosaurusPalaeagamaSaurosternonCoelurosauravusThalattosauriaHupehsuchiaIchthyopterygia Sauria Lepidosauromorpha Archosauromorpha
Captorhinidae
Captorhinidae
RomeriidaPaleothyris DiapsidaAraeoscelidia NeodiapsidaOrovenatorLanthanolaniaTangasauridaeYounginidaeClaudiosaurusPalaeagamaSaurosternonCoelurosauravusThalattosauriaHupehsuchiaIchthyopterygia Sauria Lepidosauromorpha Archosauromorpha
Paleothyris
Paleothyris
DiapsidaAraeoscelidia NeodiapsidaOrovenatorLanthanolaniaTangasauridaeYounginidaeClaudiosaurusPalaeagamaSaurosternonCoelurosauravusThalattosauriaHupehsuchiaIchthyopterygia Sauria Lepidosauromorpha Archosauromorpha
Araeoscelidia
NeodiapsidaOrovenatorLanthanolaniaTangasauridaeYounginidaeClaudiosaurusPalaeagamaSaurosternonCoelurosauravusThalattosauriaHupehsuchiaIchthyopterygia Sauria Lepidosauromorpha Archosauromorpha
Orovenator
LanthanolaniaTangasauridaeYounginidaeClaudiosaurusPalaeagamaSaurosternonCoelurosauravusThalattosauriaHupehsuchiaIchthyopterygia Sauria Lepidosauromorpha Archosauromorpha
Lanthanolania
TangasauridaeYounginidaeClaudiosaurusPalaeagamaSaurosternonCoelurosauravusThalattosauriaHupehsuchiaIchthyopterygia Sauria Lepidosauromorpha Archosauromorpha
Tangasauridae
YounginidaeClaudiosaurusPalaeagamaSaurosternonCoelurosauravusThalattosauriaHupehsuchiaIchthyopterygia Sauria Lepidosauromorpha Archosauromorpha
Younginidae
ClaudiosaurusPalaeagamaSaurosternonCoelurosauravusThalattosauriaHupehsuchiaIchthyopterygia Sauria Lepidosauromorpha Archosauromorpha
Claudiosaurus
Claudiosaurus
PalaeagamaSaurosternonCoelurosauravusThalattosauriaHupehsuchiaIchthyopterygia Sauria Lepidosauromorpha Archosauromorpha
PalaeagamaSaurosternon
PalaeagamaSaurosternon
Palaeagama
Saurosternon
CoelurosauravusThalattosauriaHupehsuchiaIchthyopterygia Sauria Lepidosauromorpha Archosauromorpha
Coelurosauravus
Coelurosauravus
ThalattosauriaHupehsuchiaIchthyopterygia Sauria Lepidosauromorpha Archosauromorpha
ThalattosauriaHupehsuchiaIchthyopterygia
Thalattosauria
HupehsuchiaIchthyopterygia
Hupehsuchia
Ichthyopterygia
SauriaLepidosauromorpha Archosauromorpha
Lepidosauromorpha
Archosauromorpha

The cladogram of Lee (2013) below used a combination of genetic (molecular) and fossil (morphological) data.

DiapsidaAraeoscelidia NeodiapsidaClaudiosaurusYounginiformes Sauria LepidosauromorphaKuehneosauridae Lepidosauria Rhynchocephalia (tuatara and their extinct relatives) Squamata (lizards and snakes) ArchosauromorphaChoristoderaProlacertiformesRhynchosauriaTrilophosaurus Archosauriformes (crocodiles, birds, and their extinct relatives)
Araeoscelidia
NeodiapsidaClaudiosaurusYounginiformes Sauria LepidosauromorphaKuehneosauridae Lepidosauria Rhynchocephalia (tuatara and their extinct relatives) Squamata (lizards and snakes) ArchosauromorphaChoristoderaProlacertiformesRhynchosauriaTrilophosaurus Archosauriformes (crocodiles, birds, and their extinct relatives)
Claudiosaurus
Younginiformes Sauria LepidosauromorphaKuehneosauridae Lepidosauria Rhynchocephalia (tuatara and their extinct relatives) Squamata (lizards and snakes) ArchosauromorphaChoristoderaProlacertiformesRhynchosauriaTrilophosaurus Archosauriformes (crocodiles, birds, and their extinct relatives)
Younginiformes
SauriaLepidosauromorphaKuehneosauridae Lepidosauria Rhynchocephalia (tuatara and their extinct relatives) Squamata (lizards and snakes) ArchosauromorphaChoristoderaProlacertiformesRhynchosauriaTrilophosaurus Archosauriformes (crocodiles, birds, and their extinct relatives)
LepidosauromorphaKuehneosauridae Lepidosauria Rhynchocephalia (tuatara and their extinct relatives) Squamata (lizards and snakes)
Kuehneosauridae
LepidosauriaRhynchocephalia (tuatara and their extinct relatives) Squamata (lizards and snakes)
Rhynchocephalia (tuatara and their extinct relatives)
Squamata (lizards and snakes)
ArchosauromorphaChoristoderaProlacertiformesRhynchosauriaTrilophosaurus Archosauriformes (crocodiles, birds, and their extinct relatives)
Choristodera
ProlacertiformesRhynchosauriaTrilophosaurus Archosauriformes (crocodiles, birds, and their extinct relatives)
Prolacertiformes
RhynchosauriaTrilophosaurus Archosauriformes (crocodiles, birds, and their extinct relatives)
RhynchosauriaTrilophosaurus
Rhynchosauria
Trilophosaurus
Archosauriformes (crocodiles, birds, and their extinct relatives)

This second cladogram is based on the 2017 study by Pritchard and Nesbitt.

NeodiapsidaOrovenatorDrepanosauromorphaWeigeltisauridaeClaudiosaurusTangasauridae (Hovasaurus, Thadeosaurus, Acerosodontosaurus) †Younginidae (Youngina, Scyllacerta) Sauria Lepidosauria ArchosauromorphaProtorosaurusTanystropheidaeRhynchosauriaAllokotosauriaProlacerta Archosauriformes
Orovenator
DrepanosauromorphaWeigeltisauridaeClaudiosaurusTangasauridae (Hovasaurus, Thadeosaurus, Acerosodontosaurus) †Younginidae (Youngina, Scyllacerta) Sauria Lepidosauria ArchosauromorphaProtorosaurusTanystropheidaeRhynchosauriaAllokotosauriaProlacerta Archosauriformes
Drepanosauromorpha
WeigeltisauridaeClaudiosaurusTangasauridae (Hovasaurus, Thadeosaurus, Acerosodontosaurus) †Younginidae (Youngina, Scyllacerta) Sauria Lepidosauria ArchosauromorphaProtorosaurusTanystropheidaeRhynchosauriaAllokotosauriaProlacerta Archosauriformes
Weigeltisauridae
ClaudiosaurusTangasauridae (Hovasaurus, Thadeosaurus, Acerosodontosaurus) †Younginidae (Youngina, Scyllacerta) Sauria Lepidosauria ArchosauromorphaProtorosaurusTanystropheidaeRhynchosauriaAllokotosauriaProlacerta Archosauriformes
Claudiosaurus
Tangasauridae (Hovasaurus, Thadeosaurus, Acerosodontosaurus) †Younginidae (Youngina, Scyllacerta) Sauria Lepidosauria ArchosauromorphaProtorosaurusTanystropheidaeRhynchosauriaAllokotosauriaProlacerta Archosauriformes
Tangasauridae (Hovasaurus, Thadeosaurus, Acerosodontosaurus)
Younginidae (Youngina, Scyllacerta)
SauriaLepidosauria ArchosauromorphaProtorosaurusTanystropheidaeRhynchosauriaAllokotosauriaProlacerta Archosauriformes
Lepidosauria
ArchosauromorphaProtorosaurusTanystropheidaeRhynchosauriaAllokotosauriaProlacerta Archosauriformes
Protorosaurus
TanystropheidaeRhynchosauriaAllokotosauriaProlacerta Archosauriformes
Tanystropheidae
RhynchosauriaAllokotosauriaProlacerta Archosauriformes
Rhynchosauria
AllokotosauriaProlacerta Archosauriformes
Allokotosauria
Prolacerta Archosauriformes
Prolacerta
Archosauriformes

The following cladogram was found by Simões et al. (2022):

NeoreptiliaProcolophonomorpha NeodiapsidaYounginiformesEunotosaurusWeigeltisauridae Sauria Lepidosauromorpha Rhynchocephalia (tuatara and their extinct relatives) Squamata (lizards and snakes) Archelosauria Pantestudines (turtles and extinct relatives) ArchosauromorphaIchthyosauromorphaSauropterygiaThalattosauriaProtorosauriaProtorosauridaeTanystropheidaeDrepanosauromorphaKuehneosauridaeAllokotosauriaRhynchosauria Archosauriformes (crocodiles, birds, and their extinct relatives)
Procolophonomorpha
NeodiapsidaYounginiformesEunotosaurusWeigeltisauridae Sauria Lepidosauromorpha Rhynchocephalia (tuatara and their extinct relatives) Squamata (lizards and snakes) Archelosauria Pantestudines (turtles and extinct relatives) ArchosauromorphaIchthyosauromorphaSauropterygiaThalattosauriaProtorosauriaProtorosauridaeTanystropheidaeDrepanosauromorphaKuehneosauridaeAllokotosauriaRhynchosauria Archosauriformes (crocodiles, birds, and their extinct relatives)
Younginiformes
EunotosaurusWeigeltisauridae Sauria Lepidosauromorpha Rhynchocephalia (tuatara and their extinct relatives) Squamata (lizards and snakes) Archelosauria Pantestudines (turtles and extinct relatives) ArchosauromorphaIchthyosauromorphaSauropterygiaThalattosauriaProtorosauriaProtorosauridaeTanystropheidaeDrepanosauromorphaKuehneosauridaeAllokotosauriaRhynchosauria Archosauriformes (crocodiles, birds, and their extinct relatives)
Eunotosaurus
Weigeltisauridae Sauria Lepidosauromorpha Rhynchocephalia (tuatara and their extinct relatives) Squamata (lizards and snakes) Archelosauria Pantestudines (turtles and extinct relatives) ArchosauromorphaIchthyosauromorphaSauropterygiaThalattosauriaProtorosauriaProtorosauridaeTanystropheidaeDrepanosauromorphaKuehneosauridaeAllokotosauriaRhynchosauria Archosauriformes (crocodiles, birds, and their extinct relatives)
Weigeltisauridae
SauriaLepidosauromorpha Rhynchocephalia (tuatara and their extinct relatives) Squamata (lizards and snakes) Archelosauria Pantestudines (turtles and extinct relatives) ArchosauromorphaIchthyosauromorphaSauropterygiaThalattosauriaProtorosauriaProtorosauridaeTanystropheidaeDrepanosauromorphaKuehneosauridaeAllokotosauriaRhynchosauria Archosauriformes (crocodiles, birds, and their extinct relatives)
LepidosauromorphaRhynchocephalia (tuatara and their extinct relatives) Squamata (lizards and snakes)
Rhynchocephalia (tuatara and their extinct relatives)
Squamata (lizards and snakes)
ArchelosauriaPantestudines (turtles and extinct relatives) ArchosauromorphaIchthyosauromorphaSauropterygiaThalattosauriaProtorosauriaProtorosauridaeTanystropheidaeDrepanosauromorphaKuehneosauridaeAllokotosauriaRhynchosauria Archosauriformes (crocodiles, birds, and their extinct relatives)
Pantestudines (turtles and extinct relatives)
ArchosauromorphaIchthyosauromorphaSauropterygiaThalattosauriaProtorosauriaProtorosauridaeTanystropheidaeDrepanosauromorphaKuehneosauridaeAllokotosauriaRhynchosauria Archosauriformes (crocodiles, birds, and their extinct relatives)
IchthyosauromorphaSauropterygiaThalattosauria
Ichthyosauromorpha
SauropterygiaThalattosauria
Sauropterygia
Thalattosauria
ProtorosauriaProtorosauridaeTanystropheidaeDrepanosauromorphaKuehneosauridaeAllokotosauriaRhynchosauria Archosauriformes (crocodiles, birds, and their extinct relatives)
ProtorosauriaProtorosauridaeTanystropheidaeDrepanosauromorphaKuehneosauridae
Protorosauridae
TanystropheidaeDrepanosauromorphaKuehneosauridae
Tanystropheidae
DrepanosauromorphaKuehneosauridae
Drepanosauromorpha
Kuehneosauridae
AllokotosauriaRhynchosauria Archosauriformes (crocodiles, birds, and their extinct relatives)
AllokotosauriaRhynchosauria
Allokotosauria
Rhynchosauria
Archosauriformes (crocodiles, birds, and their extinct relatives)

The following cladogram was found by Jenkins et al. (2025). Traditional parareptiles are highlighted in orange:

SauropsidaAraeoscelidiaBolosauridae NeoreptiliaAnkyramorphaAcleistorhinidaePareiasauromorphaProcolophonoideaMesosauridaeCabarziaAscendonanusOrovenator ParapleurotaMillerettidae NeodiapsidaYounginidaeTangasauridaeWeigeltisauridaeClaudiosaurus Sauria Lepidosauromorpha Archosauromorpha
Araeoscelidia
Bolosauridae NeoreptiliaAnkyramorphaAcleistorhinidaePareiasauromorphaProcolophonoideaMesosauridaeCabarziaAscendonanusOrovenator ParapleurotaMillerettidae NeodiapsidaYounginidaeTangasauridaeWeigeltisauridaeClaudiosaurus Sauria Lepidosauromorpha Archosauromorpha
Bolosauridae
NeoreptiliaAnkyramorphaAcleistorhinidaePareiasauromorphaProcolophonoideaMesosauridaeCabarziaAscendonanusOrovenator ParapleurotaMillerettidae NeodiapsidaYounginidaeTangasauridaeWeigeltisauridaeClaudiosaurus Sauria Lepidosauromorpha Archosauromorpha
AnkyramorphaAcleistorhinidaePareiasauromorphaProcolophonoidea
Acleistorhinidae
PareiasauromorphaProcolophonoidea
Pareiasauromorpha
Procolophonoidea
MesosauridaeCabarziaAscendonanusOrovenator ParapleurotaMillerettidae NeodiapsidaYounginidaeTangasauridaeWeigeltisauridaeClaudiosaurus Sauria Lepidosauromorpha Archosauromorpha
Mesosauridae
CabarziaAscendonanusOrovenator ParapleurotaMillerettidae NeodiapsidaYounginidaeTangasauridaeWeigeltisauridaeClaudiosaurus Sauria Lepidosauromorpha Archosauromorpha
CabarziaAscendonanusOrovenator
Cabarzia
AscendonanusOrovenator
Ascendonanus
Orovenator
ParapleurotaMillerettidae NeodiapsidaYounginidaeTangasauridaeWeigeltisauridaeClaudiosaurus Sauria Lepidosauromorpha Archosauromorpha
Millerettidae
NeodiapsidaYounginidaeTangasauridaeWeigeltisauridaeClaudiosaurus Sauria Lepidosauromorpha Archosauromorpha
Younginidae
TangasauridaeWeigeltisauridaeClaudiosaurus Sauria Lepidosauromorpha Archosauromorpha
Tangasauridae
WeigeltisauridaeClaudiosaurus Sauria Lepidosauromorpha Archosauromorpha
Weigeltisauridae
Claudiosaurus Sauria Lepidosauromorpha Archosauromorpha
Claudiosaurus
SauriaLepidosauromorpha Archosauromorpha
Lepidosauromorpha
Archosauromorpha
(=Diapsida)

See also

External links

  • Data related to Diapsid at Wikispecies
  • . Michel Laurin and Jacques A. Gauthier. Tree of Life Web Project. June 22, 2000.