Pareiasauromorpha was first used to define a group of parareptilians in 2011 by Linda A. Tsuji. The next year, Tsuji and her colleagues used Pareiasauromorpha as a node inside Procolophonia. In their 2012publication, Tsuji etal. defined it as a monophyletic node containing "nycteroleters" and "pareiasaurs".
Nycteroleteridae
Nycteroleteridae is a family, commonly called "nycteroleters", classified in Pareiasauromorpha. The group includes the genera Emeroleter, Nycteroleter, Bashykroleter, Rhipaeosaurus, Macroleter, and "Bashykroleter" mesensis. The genusTokosaurus is often classified as the sister taxon to Macroleter, but is actually more likely a juvenile of the later. Bashykroleter, including both species, is now considered paraphyletic, as "B." mesensis is more closely related to other genera than the type speciesB. bashkyricus.
Pareiasauroidea
Pareiasauroidea is a superfamily, called "pareiasaurs", that is classified as the sister group to "nycteroleters". It includes many genera, and in some classifications, is grouped with Macroleter as the most basal member, or the sister taxon, with Macroleter outside of Nycteroleteridae. Apart from the possible genus Macroleter, the species "Bradysaurus" seeleyi is often classified outside its genus as the most primitive species, with the genus also classified as basal.
Phylogeny
The cladogram below was found in 2011 by Tsuji, and modified in 2012 by Tsuji et al.: , also a pareiasaur, Berlin's Natural History Museum , a well-known pareiasaur
Distribution
Pareiasauromorphs are known from across the globe, with large numbers of genera from the Karoo Basin of SouthAfrica, and Asia. Among pareiasaurs, the genera Pareiasaurus, Anthodon, Bradysaurus, Pareiasuchus, Embrithosaurus, Nochelesaurus, Nanoparia, Pumiliopareia and "The Welgevonden Pareiasaur" are known from the Karoo Basin; Scutosaurus, Obirkovia and Deltavjatia are from Russia; Shihtienfenia, Shanchuansaurus and Shansisaurus are from China; Parasaurus is known from Germany; Bunostegos is known from Niger; Arganaceras is from Morocco; Provelosaurus is known from Brazil; and Elginia is from Scotland. Though pareiasaurs are widely distributed, all six known nycteroleters are currently only known from Russia. The group ranges in age from the earliest Guadalupian until the latest Lopingian.