Search results for "Hypsodont"

showing 5 items of 5 documents

Multiproxy dietary trait reconstruction in Pleistocene Hippopotamidae from the Mediterranean islands

2019

Abstract Geographically isolated insular species face energetic restrictions and commonly evolve adaptations that distinguish them from their mainland ancestors. During the Pleistocene, several Mediterranean islands were inhabited by now extinct Hippopotamidae. They underwent diverse changes in locomotion, dentition and body size. Based on these differences, it is supposed that they occupied different ecological niches depending on their respective faunal complexes and available resources. In this paper, we assess the paleoecology of dwarfed hippopotami from Crete, Malta, Sicily and Cyprus using a novel dental multiproxy approach. We applied dental topography analysis (SAGA-GIS) to measure …

Ecological niche010506 paleontologybiologyEcologyHippopotamus creutzburgiPaleontology15. Life on land010502 geochemistry & geophysicsOceanographybiology.organism_classification01 natural sciencesHippopotamus amphibiusHippopotamidaebiology.animalHippopotamus pentlandiHypsodontPaleoecologyHippopotamus melitensis14. Life underwaterEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGeology0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEarth-Surface ProcessesPalaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
researchProduct

Evolutionary trends in arvicolids and the endemic murid Mikrotia - New data and a critical overview

2014

Abstract The study of evolutionary rates dates back to the work of Simpson and Haldane in the 1940s. Small mammals, especially Plio-Pleistocene arvicolids (voles and lemmings), are particularly suited for such studies because they have an unusually complete fossil record and exhibit significant evolutionary change through time. In recent decades, arvicolids have been the focus of intensive research devoted to the tempo and mode of evolutionary change and the identification of trends in dental evolution that can be used to correlate and date fossil sites. These studies have raised interesting questions about whether voles and lemmings had unique evolutionary trajectories, or show convergent …

Ecological nicheArcheologyGlobal and Planetary ChangeExtinctionbiologyEcologyLineage (evolution)FossorialGeologySettore GEO/01 - Paleontologia E Paleoecologiabiology.organism_classificationHypsodontArvicolaEvolutionary trends Hypsodonty Neogene Arvicolidae MikrotiaWater voleMicrotusEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics
researchProduct

Hypsodont Myomiminae (Gliridae, Rodentia) from five new localities in the Lower Miocene Tudela Formation (Bardenas Reales, Ebro Basin, Spain) and the…

2012

The hypsodont Myomiminae Daams, 1981 (Gliridae) from the lower part of the Tudela Formation (Ebro Basin) are described. Five localities (CH1, CA2, CA3, CA4 and CC1) of this formation contain remains of the hypsodont genus Armantomy de Bruijn, 1966 and CC1 has also yielded Praearmantomys de Bruijn, 1966. Despite the poor material, we can identify the taxa A. cf. bijmai, A. daamsi (de Visser in Álvarez-Sierra, Daams, Lacomba, López Martínez, Van Der Meulen, Sesé & De Visser, 1991), A. cf. parsani, A. cf. jasperi and cf. P.crusafonti, which are characteristic of the Agenian and Ramblian continental stages. These data allow identification of the Agenian-Ramblian boundary in the Tudela Formation…

MyomiminaeEspañaPaleontologyGeologyRodentiaBiodiversityStructural basinCuenca EbroLower MiocenePaleontologyRamblianAgenianGenusMammaliaHypsodontAnimaliaChordataGliridaeGeologyTaxonomy
researchProduct

1988

Quercomys bijmai gen. nov. sp. nov., a new dormouse of the subfamily Myomiminae, is described from the Oligocene/Miocene Boundary Interval of Santa Cilia (Huesca), Quel-1 and Fuenmayor-2 (La Rioja). Quercomys gen. nov. is characterized by its medium size, its hypsodont teeth, and its simple dental pattero. It is related to other genera, like Praearmantomys, Armantomys or Pseudodryomys , and its appearance is at a moment of high diversity of the family.

PaleontologyMyomiminaeSubfamilybiology.animalHypsodontZoologyGeologyBiologyDormouseEstudios Geológicos
researchProduct

Brachyodonty and hypsodontyin some Palaeogene Eurasiatic Lagomorphs

1977

Abstract Palaeogene Eurasiatic lagomorphs show more or less different degrees and kinds of brachiodonty and hypsodonty in the cheek teeth. No fully brachyodont lagomorphs are known up to the present. The probably Paleocene Mimolagus from Western Kansu shows the less advanced stage against partial hypsodonty in the upper cheek teeth. Partial hypsodonty is more advanced in the late Eocene Mongolian genera Shamolagus, Gobiolagus and Lushilagus. Roots, however, are still well developed in the cheek teeth. Some recent discoveries from earlier Oligocene sites in France and Germany seem to represent a comparable degree of hypsodonty. The Asiatic Oligocene Desmatolagus is partiallyhypsodont with ro…

Root formationPaleontologyLineage (genetic)TaxonSpace and Planetary ScienceCheek teethVallesianEurasiatic languagesHypsodontPaleontologyPaleogeneGeologyGeobios
researchProduct