Dukecynus

Dukecynus
Temporal range: Miocene, 13–11 Ma
Fossil illustration
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Infraclass: Metatheria
Order: Sparassodonta
Family: Prothylacinidae
Genus: Dukecynus
Goin, 1997
species
  • Dukecynus magnus

Dukecynus is an extinct genus of meat-eating mammal, belonging to the order Sparassodonta (a clade included within Metatheria, a group that includes the mammals most related with marsupials), which lived in South America during the Miocene period average between about 13 and 12 million years ago.[1]

A single species known so far, Dukecynus magnus. The name of the genus meaning "Duke dog", for the Duke University and the Greek word cynos, dog, for the pretended similarity of this animal with dogs. The species name "magnus" derives from Latin for big, to reflect their great size. Dukecynus was discovered in the strata of La Venta in the department of Huila and Tolima in Colombia, where the fossil remains were found: the lower jaw and upper jaw with teeth (holotype specimen IGM 251149), more some referred molar teeth. Although these remains are scarce had yet enough features for diagnosing a new taxon and show that this species was the largest representative of the sparassodont family Prothylacynidae, weighing close at 68 kilograms.[2] This animal, looking vaguely like a wolf and with similar dimensions, is characterized by a long narrow face (Goin, 1997), while its teeth suggest it was more carnivorous that other prothylacynids; Dukecynus probably was the largest mammal predator of La Venta and it coexisted with a smaller species of prothylacynid, the more arboreal Lycopsis longirostrus. Their molars suggest a close affinities to the Argentinean species Pseudolycopsis cabrerai (from the Chasicoan mammal age). A fragmentary specimen of large sparassodont found in La Venta, consisting in part of the jaw and parts of the humerus and femur, catalogued as UCMP 39250, originally reported by Marshall (1978) as "cf. Arctodictis"[3] could also belong to Dukecynus or a similar species.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 Goin, F. J. 1997 New clues for understanding Neogene marsupial radiations. In A history of the neotropical fauna. Vertebrate paleobiology of the Miocene in Colombia (ed. R. F. Kay, R. H. Maden, R. L. Cifelli & J. Flynn), pp. 185–204. Washington DC: Smithsonian Institution Press.
  2. Stephen Wroe, Christine Argot and Christopher Dickman. On the rarity of big fierce carnivores and primacy of isolation and area: tracking large mammalian carnivore diversity on two isolated continents. Proc. R. Soc. Lond. B (2004) 271, 1203–1211 1203, doi 10.1098/rspb.2004.2694
  3. Marshall, L. Evolution of the Borhyaenidae, extinct South American predaceous marsupials. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1978.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, September 25, 2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.