Showing posts with label Perissodactyla. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Perissodactyla. Show all posts

Saturday, 24 October 2020

Exploring the relationship between Litopterns and Perissodactyls

The Mammalian group Litopterna was coined by Florentino Ameghino in 1889, as a Suborder of the Perissodactyla, with the aim to include the aberrant Macrauchenia and its kin. Ameghino recognized affinities with the Laurasian clade Perissodactyla, a hypothesis sustained by some old workers. This idea was posteriorly criticised and refuted, and it was proposed that the similarities between Litopterns and Perissodactyls were acquired by convergence. In the same line of thought, together with Xenarthrans and Marsupials, South American native Ungulates were considered by George Gaylord Simpson. as comprising the 'Ancient Immigrants' Faunistic Stratum, coming from North America through a intercontinental bridge. Since then, the Litopterna weas regarded as an endemic clade exclusive of South America, with uncertain affinities to other Mammalian lineages. In line with Simpson proposal, most authors indicate that Litopterns were the descendants of 'ancient Ungulates' arriving at South America from North America by a land connection at the Latest Cretaceous–Early Paleocene. However eecent phylogenetic analysis based on protein spectrometry and DNA analyses resulted in the referral of Litopterna to Perissodactyla, in agreement with nineteenth century authors.

In a paper published in the journal Scientific Reports on 6 August 2020, Nicolás Chimento of the Laboratorio de Anatomía Comparada y Evolución de los Vertebrados at the Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturales 'Bernardino Rivadavia' and the Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas, and Federico Agnolin, also of the Laboratorio de Anatomía Comparada y Evolución de los Vertebrados at the Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturales 'Bernardino Rivadavia' and the Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas, and of the Fundación de Historia Natural 'Félix de Azara' at Universidad Maimónides, present the results of a study which aimed to include representatives of Litopterna within a comprehensive morphological data matrix of basal Ungulates and to test, on the basis of morphology, the phylogenetic results obtained by previous authors, and discuss the palaeobiogeographical implications of Litoptern affinities.

The phylogenetic analysis performed by Chimento and Agnolin is congruent with recent claims, based on molecular evidence, in which Litopterna is nested within Pan-Perissodactyla, as the sister group of remaining Perissodactyls. The inclusion of Litopterna among Perissodactyls partially returns to the old ideas of Florentino Ameghino However, in contrast with Ameghino, and in agreement with Richard Cifelli, Chimento and Agnolin also consider Didolodontidae as closely related to Litopterns.

 
Simplified cladogram showing key anatomical traits in Pan-Perissodactyla tree. (A) right m2-3 of Didolodus multicuspis (MACN A-10689) in occlusal view; (B) lower jaw with left p3-m2 of Thoatherium minusculum (MACN A-2980-89); (C) left calcaneum (posterior view) of Thoatherium minusculum (MACN A-2980-89) and left astragalus (ventral and dorsal views) of Tetramerorhinus mixtum (MACN A-3009-3015). Key: (1) bulbous lower molars with apices of cusps approximated to each other; (2) well-defined third lobe on lower m3; (3) fused symphysis; (4) selenodont lower molars; (5) posterior astragalar facet of the calcaneum angular and interlocks with the astragalus; (6) saddle-shaped navicular facet of astragalus; (7) narrow and deep astragalar trochlea. Scale bars, 5 mm. Chimento & Agnolin (2020).

The analysis resulted in that Kollpaniidae, Didolodontidae, and Litopterna form successive stem-groups to Perissodactyla. All these taxa are united by features commonly regarded as diagnostic of perissodactyls, including metacone on P3 present but smaller than paracone, p3 metaconid present and close to protoconid, p4 entoconid absent, and m2 hypoconulid separate from hypolophid. This combination of characters is present in most known Pan-Perissodactyls, and sustains the Perissodactyl affinities of Litopterns, and South American 'Condylarths'. It is worthy to mention that such combination of characters is totally absent in North American Palaeogene Mioclaenidae 'Condylarths', such as Mioclaenus and Promioclaenus. These have been considered the group that most likely gave rise to the South American 'Condylarths' and Litopterns. Further, Kollpaniids as Molinodus, Simoclaenus and Tiuclaenus differ from typical Mioclaenids such as Promioclaenus, and resemble Didolodontids, basal Litopterns and Perissodactyls in having more bulbous lower molars, with apices of the cusps more approximated, in the longer trigonid of lower molars with paraconid more separated from metaconid, in the enlarged m3 and in the unreduced M3.

 
Dentition of Didolodontid and Litoptern ungulates, showing selected phylogenetically informative traits. (A), (B) Didolodus multicuspis, (A) left maxilla with P3-M3 in occlusal view (MACNA-10690), (B) right dentary with p2-m3 in occlusal view (MACN A-10689); (C) Tetramerorhinus mixtum left upper P1-M3 in occlusal view (MACN A-8970/98, holotype); (D) Theosodon glacilis right lower jaw with p3-m3 in occlusal view (MACN A-9269/88). Key: (1) non-molariform premolars; (2) additional conules; (3) fused dentary symphysis; (4) twinned metaconids; (5) prominent parastyle; (6) paracone and metacone subequal in size and shape; (7) well-developed cristid obliqua; (8) reduced valley between talonid and trigonid; (9) well developed lingual crests. Scale bars: (A), (B) 5 mm; (C), (D), 1 cm. Chimento & Agnolin (2020).

Dental similarities between South American Condylarths and Litopterns were previously noted by several authors, whom indicate that they may form a monophyletic clade, for which the name Panameriungulata is available. Chimento and Agnolin's partially agree with such proposal, being congruent in that South American Condylarths and Litopterns constitute successive stem-taxa of Perissodactyla.

South American Condylarths have been variously allied to the North American families Arctocyonidae, Hyopsodontidae, Phenacodontidae, Periptychidae, and Mioclaenidae. Richard Cifelli suggested that North American Mioclaenines could serve as structural ancestors for the South American Didolodontidae, and numerous workers sustained a close relationship between North American Mioclaenidae and South American Ungulates. However, it has recently been remarked that there is no support of close phylogenetic relationships between North American Mioclaenidae and South American Condylarths and native Ungulates. Even detailed morphological analysis did not find any derived character shared between Mioclaenidae and South American or African taxa.

In sum, Chimento and Agnolin's analysis indicates that South American Condylarths are probably not closely allied to Northern Hemisphere taxa. South American forms share a number of derived features with Perissodactyls that are absent in basal North American Ungulate taxa.

The monophyly of Kollpaniidae resulted unresolved, with Pucanodus, Molinodus, Simoclaenus and Tiuclaenus, conforming a basal polytomy to remaining Pan-Perissodactyla. Because it was not the aim of Chimento and Agnolin's analysis to resolve the internal relationships among Kollpaniids, they do not discuss the monophyly of this grouping in length.

Miguelsoria and Protolipterna were first included as belonging to Protolipternidae. In Chimento and Agnolin's analysis they are included in the Didolodontidae, following recent proposals. The clade including Didolodontidae + (Litopterna + Perissodactyla) is sustained by six unambiguous synapomorphies, namely: P4 with metacone subequal in size to paracone, M3 size subequal or larger than M2, M3 metacone lingually shifted, lingual metaconid buttress on lower molars, buccally tilted paracone on upper molars, and lower molars hypoconid large, extending on the lingual half of the talonid, invading talonid basin anterior to hypoconulid. Many of these features are typically considered as diagnostic of Perissodactyla, and were regarded as widespread among Didolodontids, such as Didolodus and Asmithwoodwardia, as well as Litopterns (e.g. Proterotherium, Victorlemoinea), and are also observed in Escribania. These traits are totally absent in other basal Ungulates including South American 'Condylarths; of the clade Kollpaniidae.

In addition to the above mentioned synapomorphies, some other key-traits shared by Didolodontids, Litopterns and Perissodactyls include a fused mandibular symphysis, twinned lower molar metaconids, and a well-defined third lobe on the last lower molar, a combination of traits previously considered as unique to Perissodactyls. Didolodontidae shares with basal Perissodactyls such as Cambaytheriids and Anthracobunids many plesiomorphic features including bunodont cheek-teeth with well-developed conules on upper molars, and the lack of any hint of lophodonty. In fact, very prominent conules are usually considered to be diagnostic of Didolodontids, but are present also in Cambaytheriids and Anthracobunids, sustaining close relationships between these clades.

Litopterns and Perissodactyls share a number of apomorphies absent in basal Ungulates and all South American 'Condylarths', including Didolodontids. These traits include a saddle-shaped navicular facet of astragalus, P3 parastyle protruding, with mesial edge concave, paracone and metacone of M1-2 about the same size, p4 paralophid well developed without paraconid, and mesially directed, m1 paralophid extending lingually and connected to mesial crest from metaconid, well-developed lower molar cristid obliqua obliquely oriented and contacting lingual cusps, resulting in a reduced valley between trigonid and talonid, m3 hypolophid complete, lingual and labial cristids subequal in length, lower molar posthypocristid absent, and m2 hypoconulid closely appressed to hypolophid. Most of the listed dental traits are related with the rearrangement of cusps due to the development of cristids and lophids, resulting in the progressive acquisition of selenodont dentition characterising Perissodactyls and Litopterns. Presence of saddle-shaped navicular facet of astragalus was recently regarded as one of the key-characters diagnosing Perissodactyla. Regarding the latter feature, it appears that the Didolodontids had a primitive-like astragali, showing an homogeneously convex navicular facet, very different from the saddle-shaped morphology reported for Litopterns and Perissodactyls.

 
Selected postcranial elements of Litopterns. (A)–(F) Tetramerorhinus mixtum (MACN A-8970/98), (A)–(C) right humerus in (A) anterior; (B) distal; and (C) posterior views; (D) right radius and ulna in anterior view; (E), (F) left femur in (E) distal, and (F) posterior views; (G) Diadiaphorus majusculus (MACN A-2713/37) right foot in anterior view; (H), (I) Theosodon lyddekeri (MACN A-11027) left foot in (H) proximal, and (I) anterior views. Abbreviations: cap capitulum, ent entepicondyle, lsc lateral supinator crest, ra radius, stf supratrochlear foramen, ul ulna, 1, prominent greater trochanter; 2, not prominent and proximally restricted deltopectoral crest; 3, reduced lateral supinator crest; 4, wide and deep supratrochlear foramen; 5, reduced entepicondyle; 6, transversely narrow trochlea delimited by acute ridges; 7, radius anterior to ulna; 8, prominent and large third trochanter; 9, mesaxonic foot; hoof-like ungual phalanges. Scale bar: (A)–(E) 1 cm; (F)–(I) 2 cm. Chimento & Agnolin (2020).

In addition, Litopterns share a large number of postcranial traits previously regarded as typical of Perissodactyla, including mesaxonic foot symmetry with reduced metapodials I and V, and hoof-like terminal phalanges, femur with large third trochanter and prominent greater trochanter, and very expanded greater trochanter on humerus (much more expanded than in basal Condylarths as Phenacodus, Arctocyon, or Tetraclaenodon), the distal humeral articulation is strikingly narrow and high, proximally delimited by a large foramen, and the radius is anteriorly located to the ulna. These features are correlated with an increased stride length and joints with reduced rotation, a combination of characters typical of Perissodactyls.

In Litopterns, as occurs in Perissodactyls, the deltopectoral crest of humerus is not protrudent, and is restriced to the proximal half of the bone, whereas in Phenacodontids and Cambaytheriids the crest is distinct and plesiomorphically extends towards the distal end of the bone. Further, the entepicondyles and the lateral supinator crest are reduced, contrasting with Condylarths and basal Perissodactyls such as Cambaytheriids. In addition, the posterior astragalar facet of the calcaneum is angular and interlocks with the atragalus, whereas in Cambaytheriids and Condylarths this facet is rounded.

One surprising result of present analysis was the nesting of the South American Condylarth Escribania among Palaeogene Indian Cambaytheriidae and Anthracobunidae. These taxa share some unambiguous synapomorphies, including absence of lower molar metaconid buttress, individualized protostyle on upper molars, and distinct entoconulid on lower molars. Chimento and Agnolin interpret the large and well-developed cusp in the lower molars of Escribania, and sometimes described as the 'accesory cusp 2' as the entoconulid, because it is located anteromedially to the entoconid cusp.

 
Tarsal bones of selected Litopterns. (A), (E), (F) Tetramerorhinus mixtum; (A) (MACN A-8970/98) left articulated calcaneum and astragalus in dorsal view; (B), (C) Theosodon lyddekeri (MACN A-2619–24) right calcaneum in (B) dorsal, and (C) medial views; (D) Theosodon lyddekeri (MACN A-10977/78) right astragalus in dorsal view; (E), (F) right astragalus in (E) ventral and (F) dorsal views. Abbreviations: AS astragalus, CA calcaneum, nf navicular facet, paa posterior astragalar articulation, sf sustentacular facet, tr astragalar trochlea. Scale bars: (A), (E), (F) 5 mm; (B)–(D) 1 cm. Chimento & Agnolin (2020).

Escribania shares with Didolodontids, Litopterns and Perissodactyls several features (e.g., m3 with entoconid similar in size to hypoconulid, entoconid and hypoconulid separate, absence of entocristid, and presence of additional cusp mesial to entoconid). However, it differs from Didolodontids in several dental traits: m3 with inflated metaconid that invades the talonid basin, relatively narrower talonid, and large trigonid with well-developed paraconid. Further, Escribania shows a large parastyle as large as the mesostyle. These features are clearly present in Cambaytheriids, such as Cambaytherium.

 
Escribania chubutensis (UNPSJB PV 916, holotype). Posterior portion of left dentary with m2-3, in (A) lateral, and (B) occlusal views. Abbreviation: enld entoconulid, end entoconid, hyld hypoconulid, hyd hypoconid, med metaconid, pad paraconid, prd protoconid. Scale bar is 5 mm. Chimento & Agnolin (2020).

Perissodactyls sensu stricto, excluding Litopterns, and South American Condylarths are joined by a large combination apomorphies: absence of first metacarpal, metaconule mesially displaced on P4, preparaconule crista on upper molars joined with paracone, and m3 hypoconulid connection joining mid-hypolophid, among others.

Cambaytheriidae and Anthracobunidae result included in the sister-group of remaining Perissodactyla, in agreement with recent contributions.

Recently, on the basis of protein analysis, it has been suggested that Notoungulates and Litopterns may belong to Perissodactyla. Regarding Notoungulates, many authors indicate that they are probably not phylogenetically close to Litopterns, and that Notoungulates share features with Afrotherians. This last proposal resulted in a hot debate about Notoungulate origins. In this way, present discussion will focus on the biogeographic implications of Perissodactyl affinities for Litopterns.

Seminal studies by Florentino Ameghino on fossil Mammals from Patagonia resulted in a number of biogeographical relationships for the entire Mammalian clade. This palaeontologist proposed that most Mammals originate in the Southern Cone and from there dispersed trough the entire world, a point of view known as 'Extreme Australism'. This was refuted by Albert Gaudry, who considered that most characters linking Argentinean fossils with those of other landmasses are the result of convergences through a long time of isolated and parallel evolution, a 'Splendid Isolation' as coined by George Gaylord Simpson. 

In spite that most authors (with exception of Christian de Muizon and Richard Cifelli) were not able to find special similarities between North American and South American basal Ungulates, it was clear to them that South American Condylarths undoubtedly arrived from North America. Present work failed to find a clade encompassing South American and North American Condylarths, suggesting the possibility that South American Litopterns may not be necessarily related to Northern Hemisphere taxa, in agreement with some previous authors. 

In this sense, the model of South America isolation may be too biotically simplistic, as demonstrated by several studies which indicate that several Animal and Plant lineages reached South America from Africa by the Late Cretaceous and Tertiary (e.g., Legumes, Lauraceans, and several others). On this basis, authors indicate that Africa and South America may have been united by Walvis Ridge-Río Grande Rise, and Sierra Leone-Ceará Rises during the Early Tertiary. This is sustained by a large number of taxa shared between Africa and South America, but also with other landmasses and especially India, including Hystricognath Rodents, Anthropoid Monkeys, Afrotherian Mammals, Pipid Frogs, freshwater Fish (Cichlids and Aplocheiloids), Birds (Parrots, Hoatzins, Phororhacoids), and Lizards (Geckos), and Malpighiaceae, Asteraceae, and Bromeliaceae among plants. Further support for this interchange includes the finding of several lineages of Metatherians, Anthropoid Monkeys and Hystricognath Rodents in South America, indicating multiple dispersals between South America and Africa and vice-versa during the Palaeogene. As enumerated above, the evidence indicating a fluid interchange between South America and other Southern Hemisphere landmasses and India has been greatly increasing during the last years. This is in agreement with the seminal idea of René Lavocat, who suggested that the fossil record indicates closer biogeographical ties between South America and Africa than between North and South America.

A strong biotic connection between South America and former Gondwanan landmasses appears to come to light. This point is crucial for understanding early biogeographical relationships of Mammals, and more efforts are urgently need in order to analyse and criticise in detail different biogeographical scenarios.

There are striking similarities between the Latest Cretaceous and Palaeogene faunas and floras of former Gondwanan continents, including South America, Africa, and India. Jose Bonaparte noted that Mesozoic faunas from India were undoubtely Gondwanan in origin. In contrast, authors agree that the collision of India with Asia during the latest Cretaceous or Palaeogene resulted in an important faunistic exchange, and conclude that Palaeogene faunas from India were entirely composed by Laurasian taxa.

However, some recent workers sustained an important influence of Gondwanan biogeographical ties on India up to the early Tertiary. New findings suggest that by Eocene times Indian faunas were 'mixed', having both European and Gondwanan lineages. Typically Gondwanan taxa include Madtsoiid Snakes, Dyrosaurid Crocodiles and Pelomedusoid Turtles. More recently, Adapisoriculid Mammals with strong Gondwanan ties were reported for the first time in the early Eocene of India.

Chimento and Agnolin's analysis resulted in the shared presence of basal Perissodactyls in both India and South America. Further, the genus Escribania was included as the sister group of the Indian clade Cambaytheriidae + Anthracobunidae. In this way, Perissodactyls constitute another clade that adds to the list of taxa shared by India and South America. It is possible that as soon as the fossil record of Palaeogene faunas of India becomes improved, the list of taxa shared by both landmasses might increase.

Two main hypotheses explaining occurrence of Gondwanan faunas on India have become predominant. The first hypothesis proposed that these Gondwanan taxa may be the descendants of taxa already present by Cretaceous times that survived the Cretaceous/Palaeocene boundary. The second hypothesis sustain that a dispersal of Gondwanan taxa occurred from North Africa along the margins of the Neotethys to India. In this regard, an island arch (Oman–Kohistan–Dras) has been the route of migration proposed between Africa and India, during the Latest Cretaceous. Because of the meagre fossil record, both hypotheses still lack important empiric support. However, because Perissodactyls lack Cretaceous records, the shared presence of these taxa in both South America and India (and possibly Africa) may indicate Early Tertiary dispersal of Gondwanan taxa between India and North Africa.

The first works that deal with the origin of Hoofed Mammals indicate an Holarctic craddle for the Perissodactyla, particularly North American or Asiatic origins.

However, in the last decades many authors proposed that Perissodactyls may have originated on India prior to its collision with Asia. Under this hypothesis the Indian plate may have acted as a 'Noah´s Ark' during the Cretaceous and Palaeocene. Then, India carried Gondwanan forms to Asia after the break-up of the Gondwana super continent. This 'Out of India' model was followed with modifications by some authors whom sustained that Indo-Pakistan area was most likely the center of origin for the Perissodactyls. Further, it has been suggested that stem-Perissodactyla could have dispersed to India from Africa, by early Palaeocene, and then, given rise to Perissodactyla before contact of India with Asia. In partial agreement with these contributions, present phylogenetic analysis indicates that pan-perissodactyls were widespread on southern continents, particularly in India and South America (and possibly in Africa) by early Tertiary times. This suggests that the southern continents may have played an important role in the early evolution and radiation of Hoofed Mammals.

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Tuesday, 20 March 2018

Ceratotherium simum cottoni: Last surviving male Northern White Rhinoceros had died.

The last surviving male Northern White Rhinoceros, a 45-year-old called Sudan, has died. The Rhinoceros, who had been suffering from a degenerative illness, was put down by a vet on Monday 19 March 2018, at the Ol Pejeta Conservancy in Kenya, to prevent any further suffering. He is survived by only two females of the species, his daughter and granddaughter, making prospects for the survival of the species now very poor, though sperm was collected from Sudan before he died, with a view to the artificial insemination of the females.

Sudan, the last surviving White Male Rhinoceros. Ol Pejeta Conservancy.

Northern White Rhinos formerly ranged across much of East and Central Africa, but were wiped out by poaching by 2008, when the last four surviving wild members of the species were officially declared to be dead when the could not be located despite extensive searches in the Garamba National Park and surrounding areas in northeastern Democratic Republic of Congo, where they were last seen alive in 2006. The animals at the Ol Pejeta Conservancy are captive bred Rhinos that were transferred from the Dvur Kralove Zoo in the Czech Republic, in the hope of re-introducing the species to the wild, though this now seems unlikely.

See also...

http://sciencythoughts.blogspot.co.uk/2018/03/ceratotherium-simum-cottoni-last.htmlhttp://sciencythoughts.blogspot.co.uk/2017/03/rhinoceros-killed-by-poachers-at-french.html
http://sciencythoughts.blogspot.co.uk/2014/06/a-volcanically-preserved-rhinoceros.htmlhttp://sciencythoughts.blogspot.co.uk/2014/04/a-tandem-horned-elasmothere-rhinoceros.html
http://sciencythoughts.blogspot.co.uk/2014/01/rhinoceros-teeth-from-early-miocene-of.htmlhttp://sciencythoughts.blogspot.co.uk/2014/01/a-new-species-of-rhinoceros-from-late.html
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Thursday, 15 October 2015

A preserved Horse-foetus from the Middle Eocene Messel Shale.


Mammals have dominated almost all terrestrial ecosystems for the last 65 million years, however fossil Mammals, while not uncommon, are generally somewhat fragmentary, typically consisting of bone fragments and teeth, with larger more intact skeletons forming less than 2% of all know Mammal remains, and the preservation of other tissues even rarer. One location that does frequently produce more intact Mammal specimens is the early Middle Eocene Messel Shale of southern Germany, where a large number of Mammal specimens show exceptional preservation. Among the many remarkable fossils from the Messel Shale have been found a large number of specimens of the early Horse, Eurohippus messelensis, including a total of thirteen described examples of female Horses with preserved foetuses within their body cavities.

In a paper published in the journal PLoS One on 7 October 2015, Jens Lorenz Franzen of the Department Messelforschung at the Senckenberg Forschungsinstitut Frankfurt and the Department Geowissenschaften at the Naturhistorisches Museum Basel, Christine Aurich of the Department Universitätsklinik für Kleintiere und Pferde at the Veterinärmedizinische Universität Wien and Jörg Habersetzer, also of the Department Messelforschung at the Senckenberg Forschungsinstitut Frankfurt, describe a new specimen of Eurohippus messelensis, also showing the presence of a preserved foetus.

Skeleton of a mare of Eurohippus messelensis with foetus (white ellipse). The specimen was discovered and excavated by a team of the Senckenberg Research Institute Frankfurt at the Grube Messel, shoulder height ca. 30 cm, scale = 10 cm. Sven Tränkner in Franzen et al. (2015).

The new specimen is about 2 million years older than any previously described example, but is nevertheless considered to be the best preserved. It comprises a partially disarticulated post-cranial skeleton and crushed and disarticulated cranium, encased within what appears to be the preserved uterus of the adult, only the second such specimen to preserve traces of the adult reproductive tract as well as the more obvious bones of the foetus.

The foetus analyzed in detail by high-resolution micro-x-ray. Bones of the mare are indicated by black lettering, bones and teeth of the foetus by white lettering. L2-7 = lumbar vertebrae 2–7 of the mare. Scale = 10 cm. Jens Lorenz Franzen & Jörg Habersetzer in Franzen et al. (2015).

The reproductive biology of extinct animals is notoriously hard to interpret. In Mammals length of gestation is more closely tied to size than to phylogeny, however this is still only a rough guide, for example modern Horses carry their foals for about eleven months, compared to about nine months for Cows, which are approximately the same size. The modern Blue Duiker, Philantomba monticola, a small Antelope from the rainforests of Central and Southern Africa, is generally considered an approximate ecological equivalent for Eurohippus messelensis, being approximately the same size and living in a similar environment, and typically carry their young for between 201 and 213 days, giving birth to one offspring per year. The high proportion of pregnant female Eurohippus messelensis recovered from the Messel Shale suggests a similar lifestyle, with females pregnant for much of the time, but only carrying one foal per year.

Identification of the broad ligament (ligamentumlatum uteri). (a) The broad ligament in the fossil mare from the Grube Messel. Sacrum and lumbar vertebrae (L6-7) belong to the mare. Not to scale(b) Position and morphology of the broad ligament (ligamentum latum uteri) attaching the uterine horn containing the fetus to the lumbar vertebrae and the pelvis of a modern horse. Jörg Habersetzer in Franzen et al. (2015).

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The Indian Plate has been pushing into the Eurasian Plate from the south for about 55 million years, creating uplift in the Tibetan Plateau and Himalayas in the process. This has had a profound effect on the...


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Wednesday, 22 April 2015

Ancient collagen provides insights into the relationships of the South American ‘Ungulates’.


South America was an isolated continent for much of the Cainozoic,  connected only to Antarctica during the earlier part of the period and not forming a land bridge to North America until the Pliocene. This enabled the continent to develop a unique fauna and flora unlike that of other parts of the world, including creatures such as giant ‘Terror Birds’, Sloths, large carnivorous Marsupials and a number of now extinct groups of large herbivorous Mammals (‘Ungulates’); the Xenungulata, Notoungulata, Litopterna, Pyrotheria and Astrapotheria. The relationships of these extinct groups has remained controversial, with some palaeontologists suggesting they are related to other ‘Ungulates’ - Artiodactyls (Deer, Antelopes, Camels, Pigs etc.) plus Perissodactyls (Horses, Tapirs and Rhinoceroses) – while others suggest they are more closely related to the South American Xenarthrans (Sloths, Armadillos etc.).

In a paper published in the Proceedings of the Royal Society: Series B, Biological Sciences on 1 April 2015, Michael Buckley of the Faculty of Life Sciences at the Manchester Institute of Biotechnology presents a study of evolutionary relationships within Mammals based upon collagen protein sequence analysis, which includes two South American ‘Ungulates’ the Litoptern Macrauchenia patachonica and the Notoungulate Toxodon platensis.

The Litoptern Macrauchenia patachonica (larger skeleton at rear). Ryan Somma/Wikimedia Commons.

The last two decades has seen a revolution in taxonomic classification based upon the use of DNA analysis. Loosely speaking, the DNA of animals and plants contains large areas of non-coding DNA, which do not apparently serve any function and therefore are not subject to evolutionary pressures. The mutation rate in these areas of DNA is therefore thought to be a steadily paced ‘random walk’, enabling DNA-based phylogenies to be build up which are not subject to convergent evolution (structures being subject to similar evolutionary pressures and therefore ending up looking the same), as is the case with phytogenic trees based upon morphological comparisons.

DNA-based studies have led to Therian (Placental) Mammals being divided into four main groups, the Euarchontoglires (Primates, Rodents and Lagomorphs), the Laurasiatherians (Bats, Carnivores, Perissodactyls etc.), the Afrotherians (Elephants, Elephant Shrews, Hyraxes etc.) and the Xenarthrans (Sloths, Armadillos etc.), with the Euarchontoglires and Laurasiatherians being considered sister-groups, sometimes referred to collectively as the Boreoeutheria and different studies resulting in either the Afrotherians or Xenarthrans being the closest relatives of this combined group.

DNA sequencing techniques have also been applied to the remains of a variety of ancient organisms, with positive results being obtained from material as old as the early Pleistocene in cool regions (claims of DNA recovery from older material, particularly Mesozoic Dinosaurs, are at best fanciful). However much of South America has a tropical or subtropical climate, severely limiting the potential of DNA recovery from many of its unique fossil groups somewhat unlikely.

Collagen is one of the toughest and most widely used proteins in vertebrate bodies, being found in cartilage, ligaments, tendons and, significantly, in bone. The mineral structure of vertebrate bone is essentially laid down over a framework of collagen, encasing this protein in a mineral matrix which can preserve it from environmental damage long after the death of the animal. Significantly collagen has a somewhat flexible composition, and away from binding sites can contain any amino acids without apparent harm. This means that like DNA, the amino acid structure of collagen is subject to an evolutionary random walk, which can be used to trace evolutionary relationships within vertebrate groups.

Specimen of the Notoungulate Toxodon platensis on display at the Bernardino Rivadavia Natural Sciences Museum. Wikimedia Commons.

Buckley extracted collagen samples from two specimens each of the Litoptern Macrauchenia patachonica and the Notoungulate Toxodon platensis from Pleistocene sites in Buenos Aires, Argentina, and used them to build a collagen proteomic family tree which also included representatives of the Euarchontoglires, Laurasiatherians, Afrotherians, Xenarthrans, Marsupials and Monotremes.

His results recovered the existence of the Boreoeutheria, comprising the Euarchontoglires and Laurasiatherians. The sister group to the Boreoeutheria was the Xenarthrans, with the Afrotherans being the sister group to all other placental Mammals. Within the studied animals, the Litoptern Macrauchenia patachonica and the Notoungulate Toxodon platensis were the closest relatives of eachother, and both were more closely related to the Perissodactyls than any other group.

Phylogenetic analyses of Toxodon and Macrauchenia collagen sequences matched by LC–MS/MS rooted to the duck-billed platypus (Ornithorhynchus), showing maximum-likelihood analysis using PhyML with 10 000 bootstraps (less than 50 not shown except for Toxodon and Macrauchenia). Buckley (2015).

This study suggests that at least two of the extinct South American Ungulate groups, the Litopterns and the Notoungulates, were closely related to the Perissodactyls, leading to a distinct possibility that the other three groups, the Xenungulates, Pyrotherians and Astrapotherians were also. This also suggests that the ancestors of these animals were able to make the crossing between Laurasia (Eurasia plus South America) some-time in the early Cainozoic or possibly the End Cretaceous, suggesting that a land bridge between North and South America must have existed at this time.

See also…

The Early Eocene was a time of high species turnover among Mammals (and other groups), driven by two periods of extreme global warming, the...



Tapirs are forest dwelling Perissodactyls (even-toed ungulates, the group of Mammals that also includes Horses and Rhinos) currently found in India, South and Central America. They are thought to have originated in North America, and subsequently dispersed across Eurasia; both areas having large numbers of...


Volcanic preservation is considered very unusual in Palaeontology. Ashfalls sometimes preserve tissues, and more often traces such as footprints or burrows, but contact with hotter volcanic material is extremely damaging to most organic matter, and therefore...




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Thursday, 30 October 2014

Mammal remains from the Early Eocene of northern British Columbia.


The Early Eocene was a time of high species turnover among Mammals (and other groups), driven by two periods of extreme global warming, the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum about 55.8 million years ago and the Early Eocene Climatic Optimum, between about 53 and 50 million years ago. During the Early Eocene many of the Mammal groups which had survived the End Cretaceous Extinction disappeared, and were replaced by representatives of modern groups which persist to this day.

This makes Early Eocene Mammalian faunas of particular interest to palaeontologists, although examples of such faunas are somewhat rare, leading to a patchy understanding of Early Eocene Mammalian biogeography. In North America Mammal remains are known from Ellesmere Island in the Canadian High Arctic and the Western Interior of the United States, particularly Colorado and Wyoming, but are unknown from the rest of the continent.

In a paper published in the Journal ofVertebrate Palaeontology on 8 July 2014, Jaelyn Eberle of the University of Colorado Museum of Natural History and Department of Geological Sciences at the University of Colorado at Boulder, Natalia Rybczynski of Palaeobiology at the Canadian Museum of Nature and David Greenwood of the Department of Biology at Brandon University describe two Mammal specimens from the Driftwood Creek Beds (part of the Oota Lake Group) in Driftwood Canyon Provincial Park, east of Smithers in northern British Columbia.

The Driftwood Canyon Provincial Park was established in 1967 in order to protect the fossils there, after the landowner donated the site to the Province of British Columbia. The site has yielded extensive plant remains, predominantly Conifers (Redwoods, Cedars, Firs, Larches, Spruces, Pines and Golden Larches) with some broadleaved deciduous Angiosperms (Alders, Birches, Sassafrasses, Elms and members of the Oak Family) and other plants (Ginko and the Fern Azolla, which forms floating mats on still or slow moving waterways). The site has also yielded numerous Fish and Insect fossils, as well as some Bird remains, which have yet to be formally described. The site also has interbedded volcanic ashes, which allow for accurate isotopic dating, which currently dates the site at 51.77 million years old, within the Early Eocene Climatic Optimum. The site has been interpreted as a the bed of a small lake in an area surrounded by dense, conifer-dominated, woodland, with annual temperatures averaging 10-15˚C and seldom falling bellow freezing.

Driftwood Canyon fossil site. (A) map showing location of Driftwood Canyon Provincial Park and other key Eocene; (B) image of the north cliffface showing lake beds, and positions of radiometrically dated volcanic ash and the level at which the Erinaceid fossil was collected. Eberle et al. (2014).

The first specimen described is a right maxilla (upper jawbone) with some teeth, thought to have come from an Erinaceomorph Lipotyphlan (Hedgehog). It is named as Silvacola acares, where ‘Silvacola’ means ‘forest-dweller’ and ‘acares’ means ‘tiny’ as the specimen is very small for a Hedgehog. Hedgehogs have previously been described from the Late Palaeocene of Central Alberta and Southern Saskatchewan and the Eocene of Wyoming.

Right maxilla of Silvacola acares in labial view. Eberle et al. (2014).

The second specimen described is a partial right dentary (lower jawbone), again with some teeth intact, of a Tapir. This is referred to the Early to Middle Eocene genus Heptodon, though not confidently assigned due to the fragmentary nature of the material. Tapirs are thought to be good proxies for forested environments (modern Tapirs are strict forest dwellers and there are no known fossil Tapirs from deposits where forests can be ruled out), supporting the current palaeoenvironmental interpretation of the Driftwood Creek  deposits.

Right dentary assigned to cf. Heptodon in labial view. Eberle et al. (2014).

See also…

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Tuesday, 1 July 2014

A new species of Tapir from South America.

Tapirs are forest dwelling Perissodactyls (even-toed ungulates, the group of Mammals that also includes Horses and Rhinos) currently found in India, South and Central America. They are thought to have originated in North America, and subsequently dispersed across Eurasia; both areas having large numbers of fossil taxa but no living species. Tapirs reached South America during the Great American Faunal Interchange, which followed the closure of the Panama Seaway, and subsequently survived the end-Pleistocene extinction in South America, where they were the largest terrestrial Mammals to do so. All Tapir species are currently classed as either Vulnerable or Endangered under the Terms of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature’s Red List of Threatened Species.

In a paper published in the Journal of Mammalogy in December 2013, a team of scientists led by Mario Cozzuol of the Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais describe a new species of Tapir from South America. This is the first new species of living Perissodactyl described for over a century, and the first new living Tapir species since 1865.

The new species is named Tapirus kabomani, which derives from ‘Arabo kabomani’ a name for Tapir in the Paumarí language, which is indigenous to the area where the first specimens were collected. Tapirus kabomani is distinct from all other Tapir species both physically and genetically, and is notably smaller and shorter than any other living Tapir or fossil South American Tapir.

Camera-trap photos of 2 specimens of Tapirus kabomani in southern Amazonas State from Brazil. Lateral view of the head and anterior body of a male (right) and female (left) specimens. Cozzuol et al. (2013).

Tapirus kabomani was found in Amazonas, Rondônia, and Mato Grosso states in Brazil and in Amazonas Department in Columbia; it is also thought to live along the Guiana Shield, in southern French Guiana and Amapá State in Brazil. This gives it a range that overlaps that of the previously described Tapirus terrestris, the first time two living species of Tapir have been shown to have overlapping ranges.

The species is described from ten specimens, the oldest of which was collected by Theodore Roosevelt in 1912. Roosevelt was apparently informed by local hunters that his specimen was a different kind of Tapir, and returned it to the United States for analysis, only to have is rejected as a local variation of Tapirus terrestris

See also…


Rhinoceroses are iconic members of the modern Mammalian megafauna, distinguished by their large bulk, thick hides and horns. There are five modern species of Rhinoceros from Africa and Asia...



Tapirs are large tropical, forest dwelling, herbivorous mammals related to Horses and Rhinoceroses. They have an unusual distribution, being found in South and Central America, as well as...



Rhinoceroses are iconic members of the modern Mammalian megafauna, distinguished by their large bulk, thick hides and horns. There are five modern species of Rhinoceros from Africa and Asia, three of which are considered to be Critically Endangered under...


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Saturday, 26 April 2014

A tandem-horned Elasmothere Rhinoceros from the Late Miocene of Gansu Province, northwest China.

Rhinoceroses are iconic members of the modern Mammalian megafauna, distinguished by their large bulk, thick hides and horns. There are five modern species of Rhinoceros from Africa and Asia, three of which are considered to be Critically Endangered under the terms of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature's Red List of Endangered Species, with the two remaining being considered Vulnerable and Near Threatened. The earliest Rhinoceroses appear in the fossil record in the Early Eocene in North America. These animals were more Horse-like than Rhinoceros-like in appearance, and the smallest were no bigger than a Dog.  Elasmothere Rhinoceros first appeared in South Asia in the Early Miocene and persisted till the Late Pleistocene.

In a paper published in the Chinese Science Bulletin in May 2013 Deng Tao of the Key Laboratory of Evolutionary Systematics of Vertebrates at the Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology at the Chinese Academy of Sciences and the Department of Geology at Northwest University, and Wang ShiQi and Hou SuKuan also of the Key Laboratory of Evolutionary Systematics of Vertebrates, describe the partial skull of an Elasmothere Rhinoceros from the Late Miocene Liushu Formation at Huaigou in Guanghe County, Gansu.

The skull is assigned to the previously described species Sinotherium lagrelii, but contains details not previously known in this species. Previously specimens of Sinotherium lagrelii, from Shanxi Province, Mongolia and Kazakhstan were known only from isolated teeth and fragments of mandible (jawbone) and cranium (skull), so while the Gansu specimen is incomplete, it reveals a lot more about the skull morphology of the species than was previously  known. 

Skull of Sinotherium lagrelii from the Linxia Basin. (a) Dorsal view; (b) lateral view; (c) ventral view. alf, anterior lacerate foramen; bt, basal tuberosity; cf, condyloid fossa; eam, external auditory meatus; fhb, frontal horn boss; gf, glenoid fossa; hf, hypoglossal foramen; in, intercondyloid notch; plf, posterior lacerate foramen; lt, lacrimal tubercle; mp, muscular process; nhb, nasofrontal horn boss; nt, nuchal tuberosity; oc, occipital condyle; pc, parietal crest; pgc, pterygoid canal; pgp, postglenoid process; pop, paroccipital process; pp, postorbital process; ptp, posttympanic process; st, supraorbital tuberosity; tc, temporal condyle; tpc, temporal crest; za, zygomatic arch. Deng et al. (2013).

The Huaigou specimen comprises the rear portion of the skull, including the posterior part of the nasal and maxilla. The preserved portion of the nasal supports a large elevated boss, with a rough surface that is associated with the presence of a horn in Rhinoceros skulls (Rhinocerous horns are comprised of keratin – hair – rather than bone, and do not necessarily survive even in conditions good for bone preservation). Behind this is a smaller depression also with a rough surface. Deng et al. interpret this as evidence for the presence of two horns high on the head of Sinotherium lagrelii.

Among Elasmothere Rhinoceros the large, Pleistocene, Elasmotherium sibiricum had a distinctive two meter horn on its forehead, while all other species in which the positioning of the horns is known have a single large horn on the front portion of the nasal (i.e. the end of the nose) similar to that seen in modern Indian and Javan Rhinoceros. Deng et al. speculate that the twin horned Sinotherium lagrelii might be intermediate between these two states, although since both horns of Sinotherium lagrelii are located on the forehead, and the presence or absence of a horn on the tip of the nose is unknown, this seems a slightly tenuous claim.

A series of six Elasmothere species from the Middle Miocene to the Late Pleistocene. They display an increase in skull size and development from a nasal horn to a frontal horn. These skulls are reconstructed based on specimens from Tunggur in Inner Mongolia, Middle Miocene for Hispanotherium tungurense, Houshan in Guanghe, Gansu, Late Miocene for Iranotherium morgani, Guonigou in Dongxiang, Gansu, Late Miocene for Parelasmotherium linxiaense, Guonigou in Dongxiang, Gansu, Late Miocene for Ningxiatherium euryrhinus, Huaigou in Guanghe, Gansu, Late Miocene for Sinotherium lagrelii, and Sarepta in Russia, Late Pleistocene for Elasmotherium sibiricum. Deng et al. (2013).

The Liushu Formation of the Linxia Basin comprises a 100 m thick sequence of light yellowish brown carbonate-cemented siltstones intercalated with a few thin beds of mudstones and marls. It has been dated to between 11 and 6.4 million years old using palaeomagnetic dating (the Earth undergoes occasional reversals of its polarity, which in some circumstances is recorded by the alignment of iron particles in sedimentary rocks; since these reversals are irregular and global, a pattern can be recognised in rocks from very different locations, and used to establish a dating sequence), with the Huaigou locality having a palaeomagnetically derived age of about 7 million years. As well as Sinotherium lagrelii the site has yielded a Bear, a Badger-like Mustelid, three Hyenas, three Felids, a Chalicothere, a Horse, a Deer, a Giraffe and two Bovids. The Bovids and Horse belong to species that have been found in Late Miocene deposits elsewhere. Analysis of pollen from the site suggests that the area was probably an arid grassland with occasional stands of broad-leaved trees.

Habitat reconstruction of Sinotherium lagrelii in the Linxia Basin during the Late Miocene. Deng et al. (2013).

See also…





















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