Global distribution: England; South Africa, Australia.
Referred material (sp.):
To compile
Type species:
L. superstes
Species:
L. superstes
Species author:
Andrews, 1922
Type specimen:
NHMUK R4828, skull and partial skeleton
Age:
Barremian, Lower Cretaceous
Geological formation:
Weald Clay Formation
Type location:
Berwick, East Sussex, England
Referred material:
To compile
Species:
L. capensis
Species author:
(Andrews, 1911)
Type specimen:
SAM-K5822, a complete skull and partial lower jaw
Age:
Uppermost Valanginian, Early Cretaceous
Geological formation:
Sundays River Formation
Type location:
Picnic Bush site overlooking Redhouse Farm, Swartkops River Valley, Cape Province, South Africa
Referred material:
None
Species:
L. clemai
Species author:
Cruickshank and Long, 1997
Type specimen:
WAM 92.8.1-1 to 68, a partial skeleton
Age:
Barremian, Early Cretaceous
Geological formation:
Birdrong Sandstone (top upper metre)
Type location:
Near Kalbarri, Carnarvon Basin, Western Australia
Referred material:
WAM 94.1.6-1 to 100, a partial skeleton less well preserved than the holotype
Lower Cretaceous plesiosaurs are rare, so Leptocleidus is important because it fills a gap in the fossil record of plesiosaurians. Leptocleidus was once considered to be a late surviving member of the family Rhomaleosauridae but it has recently been reidentified as a close relative of polycotylids. The fossils of all known species of Leptocleidus were preserved in inshore brackish or freshwater deposits. This led Cruickshank (1997) to speculate that the large pliosaurids that appeared during the Middle and Late Jurassic may have outcompeted the rhomaleosaurids in the open ocean and forced them to exploit near-shore niches instead.
The genus Leptocleidus and the type species L. superstes was established by Andrews (1922b) for a substantially complete specimen with a skull from the Weald Clay Formation of Sussex, England. There are presently two other valid species of Leptocleidus: L. capensis, and L. clemai. The genus ‘Peyerus’ was proposed for Leptocleidus capensis by Stromer (1935) but that name is now considered a junior synonym of Leptocleidus (Cruickshank 1997).