Prohesperocyon

Prohesperocyon[1]
Temporal range: Late Eocene
Fossil
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Superorder: Carnivoramorpha
Family: Miacidae
Genus: Prohesperocyon
Wang, 1994
Species: P. wilsoni
Binomial name
Prohesperocyon wilsoni
(Gustafson, 1986)

Prohesperocyon ("before Hesperocyon)" is an extinct genus of physically small terrestrial carnivoramorphs of the family Miacidae endemic to North America appearing during the Late Eocene around 36.6—36.5 mya (AEO).[2] The time of extinction is unknown.

Taxonomy

Prohesperocyon was named by Xiaoming Wang, Ph.D. in 1994. It was later verified by K. Munthe in 1998,[3] Wesley-Hunt in 2005, and Werdelin 2006, P. D. Polly et al. p. 1023. Only a single species, Prohesperocyon wilsoni, is recognized and considered the type or origin species.

Morphology

Body mass

One specimen was examined by Legendre and Roth for body mass. The specimen was estimated to weigh 2.21 kg (4.9 lb).[4]

Fossil distribution

P. wilsoni was unearthed at the Airstrip (TMM 40504) site, Presidio County, Texas dating between 36.6—36.5 million years ago.[5] This fossil species bears a combination of features that definitively mark it as a Canidae, including teeth that include the loss of the upper third molar (a general trend in canids toward a more shearing bite), and the characteristically enlarged bony bulla (the rounded covering over the middle ear). Based on what we know about its descendants, Prohesperocyon likely had slightly more elongated limbs than its predecessors, along with toes that were parallel and closely touching, rather than splayed, as in bears.[6]

References

  1. Wang, Xiaoming (1994). "Phylogenetic systematics of the Hesperocyoninae". Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 221: 1–207. hdl:2246/829.
  2. Paleobiology Database Taxa 41236, Prohesperocyon: Taxonomy, Species, Sister Genera, Morphology, Collections.
  3. Janis, Christine Marie, Brown University faculty., Scott, K. M., and Jacobs, Louis. L., SMU faculty; Evolution of Tertiary mammals of North America, Cambridge University Press; 1 edition. ISBN 0-521-78117-5.
  4. S. Legendre and C. Roth. 1988. Correlation of carnassial tooth size and body weight in recent carnivores (Mammalia). Historical Biology
  5. Paleobiology Database Collection 16888, revised on 2002-06-03, John Alroy.
  6. Wang, Xiaoming; Richard H. Tedford (2008). "How Dogs Came to Run the World". Natural History Magazine. July/August. Retrieved 2008-11-28.
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