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Dive into the research topics where Emese Bodor is active.

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Featured researches published by Emese Bodor.


Acta Palaeobotanica | 2014

European Jurassic floras: statistics and palaeoenvironmental proxies

Maria Barbacka; Emese Bodor; Agata Jarzynka; Evelyn Kustatscher; Grzegorz Pacyna; Mihai E. Popa; Giovanni Giuseppe Scanu; Frédéric Thévenard; Jadwiga Ziaja

Abstract The Jurassic floras of Europe show considerable diversity. To examine the extent of this diversity and its possible causes we used multivariate statistical methods (cluster analysis, PCA, NMDS) to compare all significant Jurassic floras in Europe. Data were based on 770 taxa from 46 fossiliferous occurrences (25 units) from France, Germany, Greenland, Hungary, Italy, Norway, Poland, Romania, Scotland, Serbia, Sweden, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom. Statistical analyses were applied at species level and genus level, and also performed for the major plant groups. The genus cladograms show affinities between different localities based on environmental factors, while the cladograms based on species affinities indicate only taxonomical correlations. The study shows that locality age does not seem to be of paramount importance for floral composition.


Paleobiology | 2014

Does morphology reflect osteohistology-based ontogeny? A case study of Late Cretaceous pterosaur jaw symphyses from Hungary reveals hidden taxonomic diversity

Edina Prondvai; Emese Bodor; Attila Ősi

Abstract With a single complete mandible and 56 mandibular symphyseal fragments of various sizes, the Late Cretaceous Hungarian azhdarchid material has been considered one of the most extensive monospecific pterosaur assemblages in the world. Representing a broad size range, these elements have been thought to demonstrate a developmental series of Bakonydraco galaczi. As such, they were ideal to test whether absolute size and/or morphology reliably indicate relative ontogenetic stages in this pterosaur. Forty-five specimens were selected for multivariate morphometrics and classified into four size classes. After acquiring the morphometric data set, we thin-sectioned eight symphyses representing all size groups and classified them into relative ontogenetic stages based on qualitative microstructural inspection prior to quantitative histological analyses. Microstructural characters suggestive of developmental state were then quantified for intra- and interindividual uni- and multivariate analyses to test the correspondence among the results of qualitative and quantitative analyses. In contrast to our expectations, histological features identified the smallest specimen as an adult and not an early juvenile. The substantial size difference between this specimen and other adults, along with its distinct microanatomical and histological features, implies the presence of at least two pterosaur taxa in this symphysis assemblage. This hypothesis is further supported by multivariate morphometrics, which separate the smallest symphyses from all other specimens that form one continuous group. Although the latter group also shows considerable size variability in corresponding ontogenetic stages, this suggests developmental plasticity rather than the presence of even more taxa, and indicates that symphysis size and morphology are poor indicators of skeletal maturity in these animals. Hence, bone histology is an important independent test of the assessment of ontogenetic stage using size and morphology.


Acta Palaeobotanica | 2015

Relationships between ecosystems and plant assemblages as responses to environmental conditions in the Lower Jurassic of Hungary and Romania

Maria Barbacka; Mihai E. Popa; Józef Mitka; Emese Bodor; Grzegorz Pacyna

Abstract Two Early Jurassic localities, the Mecsek Mts in Hungary and Anina in Romania, are similarly significant and both floras are of autochthonous/paraautochthonous origin. In the Early Jurassic the Hungarian locality was a delta plain; the Romanian locality was an intramontane depression filled predominantly by a braided river system. The floristic composition of the two localities (52 genera, 120 species), although superficially similar (25 common genera), differs at species level (only 9 common species) as well as in the proportions of taxa in major plant groups. These differences can be explained by differences in environmental conditions resulting from palaeogeographic and topographic factors. Based on previous and recent studies, alpha diversity as well as statistically (DCA, PCA) differentiated ecogroups are compared and discussed. For common species, the GLM method was used to classify them to particular environmental response types. Their environmental requirements in both ecosystems are evaluated. Some of the shared species showed different preferences at the localities, explainable by their broad ecological tolerance.


Historical Biology | 2017

Diversity and convergences in the evolution of feeding adaptations in ankylosaurs (Dinosauria: Ornithischia)*

Attila Ősi; Edina Prondvai; Jordan Mallon; Emese Bodor

Abstract Ankylosaurian dinosaurs were low-browsing quadrupeds that were traditionally thought of as simple orthal pulpers exhibiting minimal tooth occlusion during feeding, as in many extant lizards. Recent studies, however, have demonstrated that effective chewing with tooth occlusion and palinal jaw movement was present in some members of this group. Qualitative and quantitative analysis of feeding characters (i.e. craniodental features, tooth wear patterns, origin and insertion of jaw adductors) reveal at least three different jaw mechanisms during the evolution of Ankylosauria. Whereas, in basal members, food processing was restricted to simple orthal pulping, in late Early and Late Cretaceous North American and European forms a precise tooth occlusion evolved convergently in many lineages (including nodosaurids and ankylosaurids) complemented by palinal power stroke. In contrast, Asian forms retained the primitive mode of feeding without any biphasal chewing, a phenomenon that might relate to the different types of vegetation consumed by these low-level feeders in different habitats on different landmasses. Further, a progressive widening of the muzzle is demonstrated both in Late Cretaceous North American and Asian ankylosaurs, and the width and general shape of the muzzle probably correlates with foraging time and food type, as in herbivorous mammals.


Palaeoworld | 2008

Taxonomic implications of Liassic ferns Cladophlebis Brongniart and Todites Seward from Hungary

Emese Bodor; Maria Barbacka


Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology | 2016

Facies architecture and palaeoenvironmental implications of the upper Cretaceous (Santonian) Csehbánya formation at the Iharkút vertebrate locality (Bakony Mountains, Northwestern Hungary)

Gábor Botfalvai; János Haas; Emese Bodor; Andrea Mindszenty; Attila Ősi


Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology | 2016

A quantitative approach for identifying plant ecogroups in the Romanian Early Jurassic terrestrial vegetation

Maria Barbacka; Mihai E. Popa; Józef Mitka; Emese Bodor; Zoltán Püspöki; Richard William McIntosh


Acta Geologica Polonica | 2014

Triassic-Jurassic Flora of Poland; Floristical Support of Climatic Changes

Maria Barbacka; Grzegorz Pacyna; Anna Feldman-Olszewska; Jadwiga Ziaja; Emese Bodor


Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology | 2017

Changes in terrestrial floras at the Triassic-Jurassic Boundary in Europe

Maria Barbacka; Grzegorz Pacyna; Ádám T. Kocsis; Agata Jarzynka; Jadwiga Ziaja; Emese Bodor


Cretaceous Research | 2016

Vertebrate remains from the Upper Cretaceous (Santonian) Ajka Coal Formation, western Hungary

Attila Ősi; Emese Bodor; László Makádi; Márton Rabi

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Maria Barbacka

Hungarian Natural History Museum

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Attila Ősi

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Jadwiga Ziaja

Polish Academy of Sciences

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Edina Prondvai

Eötvös Loránd University

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Gábor Botfalvai

Eötvös Loránd University

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Agata Jarzynka

Polish Academy of Sciences

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