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Carodnia

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Carodnia[1]
Temporal range: Paleocene - Eocene
Carodnia vieirai
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
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Family:
Carodniidae

Genus:
Carodnia

Species
Synonyms

Ctalecarodnia Simpson 1935

Carodnia is an extinct genus of South American ungulate known from the Paleocene of Brazil and Argentina, and the Eocene of Peru.[3] Carodnia is placed in the order Xenungulata together with Etayoa and Notoetayoa.[4]

Carodnia is the largest mammal known from the Paleocene of South America. It was heavily built and had large canines and cheek teeth with a crested pattern like the uintatheres to which it can be related.[3] In life, it would have been a tapir-sized animal. It bore strong resemblances to dinoceratans, although without tusks or ossicones.

Description

Simpson noted that Carodnia resembles the primitive unitathere Probathyopsis. Although Paula Couto also made the same favourable comparison, he placed Carodnia in the new order Xenungulata. Gingerich 1985 concluded that Probathyopsis shares several dental characteristics with Carodnia, but that in the latter the anterior dentition of is more reduced, the second lower and upper premolars are enlarged and pointed, and that the first and second molars are more lophodont. Gingerich thought the differences could justify a separate family for Carodnia but proposed that it should be included in Probathyopsis. Cifelli 1883 grouped Carodnia with Pyrotheria but later concluded that this was a mistake.[5]

Carodnia is characterized by bilophodont[explain 1] first and second molars and more complex lophate[explain 1] third molars, which suggests possible links to pyrotheres, uintatheres, and even arctocyonids. The bones of the foot are short and robust and the digits terminate in broad, flat, and unfissured hoof-like unguals, unlike any other known meridiungulate.[6]

C. feruglioi and C. cabrerai (from the Riochican SALMA of Patagonia)[5] are known from only a few dental remains. C. vieirai (from the Itaboraian SALMA of Itaborai)[5] is known from much more complete dental, cranial, and postcranial remains including an almost complete mandible, many vertebrae, and several partial leg bones.[7]

When Simpson 1935 first described Carodnia and Ctalecarodnia, the former was known only from a left lower molar which was lacking in the latter, making a comparison very difficult. Paula Couto 1952, based on considerably more complete remains, concluded that the molars and premolars of both are indistinguishable and therefore reduced Ctalecarodnia to a synonym. Paula Couto also noted that the dentition of C. cabrerai and C. feruglioi are similar except in size, and that C. feruglioi can be a juvenile C. cabrerai, but nevertheless left them as two distinct species.[8]

Explanations

  1. ^ a b A loph is a crest on the crown of a tooth. A bilophodont tooth has two parallel lophs running transversally across the tooth.

Notes

  1. ^ Carodnia in the Paleobiology Database. Retrieved May 2013.
  2. ^ Pierre-Olivier Antoine, Guillaume Billet, Rodolfo Salas-Gismondi, Julia Tejada Lara, Patrice Baby, Stéphane Brusset and Nicolas Espurt (2015). "A New Carodnia Simpson, 1935 (Mammalia, Xenungulata) from the Early Eocene of Northwestern Peru and a Phylogeny of Xenungulates at Species Level". Journal of Mammalian Evolution. in press. doi:10.1007/s10914-014-9278-1.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  3. ^ a b "Pantodonts, uintatheres and xenungulates: The first large herbivorous mammals". Paleocene Mammals. August 2005. Retrieved May 2013. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  4. ^ "Xenungulata". Palaeocritti. Retrieved May 2013. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  5. ^ a b c Gingerich 1985, pp. 130–1
  6. ^ Rose 2006, Xenungulata, p. 238
  7. ^ Paula Couto 1952, pp. 371–2
  8. ^ Paula Couto 1952, pp. 372–3

References