Plesiotypotherium

Plesiotypotherium is an extinct genus of Notoungulate, belonging to the suborder Typotheria. It lived from the Middle to the Late Miocene, and its fossilized remains were discovered in South America.

Plesiotypotherium
Temporal range: Middle-Late Miocene
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Skull of Plesiotypotherium
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Notoungulata
Family: Mesotheriidae
Subfamily: Mesotheriinae
Genus: Plesiotypotherium
Villarroel, 1974
Type species
Plesiotypotherium achirense
Villarroel, 1974
Species
  • P. achirense (Villarroel, 1974
  • P. casirense (Cerdeño et al, 2012)
  • P. majus (Villarroel, 1974)
  • P. minus (Croft, 2007)

Description

This animal was somewhat similar to modern wombats, but was slightly larger-sized. Plesiotypotherium, like its relatives Trachytherus and Mesotherium, was characterized by a postcranial skeleton suited for burrowing. Its scapula was characterized by a distally located suprascapular fossa; the deltoid crest was well developed. The humerus of Plesiotypotherium was slightly thinner than in Trachytherus, and had a characteristic perforation in the olecranon fossa. The entepicondyle, ectepicondyle and supracondylar crest were well developed. The ulna was characterized by a well developed olecranon, while in the proximal area of the radius a sesamoid bone was articulated with the main bone; the distal part of the radius had particular grooves for the tendons of the extensor muscle. The hand was strong; the carpal bones, the metacarpals and the phalanges were particularly strong. The pelvic area of Plesiotypotherium was characterized by its five vertebrae firmly fused with each other. The transverse processes of the penultimate vertebra were fused solidly with the ischium. The talus had a characteristic asymmetrical trochlear keel; the lateral keel was much wider than the middle one and evocative of those of ground sloths.

The skull was characterized by its large anterior incisors, separated from the posterior teeth by a large diastema; in the species Plesiotypotherium casirense, there was a bony process in the lacrimal bone, and a large infraorbital foramen.

Classification

Plesiotypotherium is a derived member of the family Mesotheriidae, a family of notoungulates whose representatives, while superficially similar to rodents, could reach relatively large sizes.

Plesiotypotherium was first described in 1974 by Villarroel, based on well-preserved fossils found near the location Achiri, in Bolivia, dated from the Middle to Late Miocene. The type species is Plesiotypotherium achirense, and Villarroel described also P. majus, from the same locality and horizon. More recent findings from the locality Chasira, also in Bolivia, were attributed to the new species p. casirense

Palbiology

Studies carried out on the postcranial skeleton of Plesiotypotherium have permitted to determine that it was adapted for burrowing into the ground, perhaps to unearth its alimentation, potentially composed of roots and tubers.[1][2]

A skeleton belonging to Plesiotypotherium achirense showed numerous pathologies preserved in its bones and dentition. The skeleton shows the bilateral absence of permanent hypselodont molars, as well than the exostosis of several leg bones. The first pathology can be linked with the loss of the two first molars on both sides of the jaws, potentially due to long-lasting periodontal diseases ; other pathologies, notably in the skull, and possibly linked with the previous pathology, led to the overgrowth of the two first upper molars on both sides of the skull, and to the abnormal development of the masticatory muscles insertion. Other pathologies can be found in the postcranial skeleton, such as several bone growths in several areas over the articular surfaces of the leg bones, from the scapula to the distal phalanges. These pathologies may have limited the individual movements and its locomotion. Given its numerous pathologies, one could assume that this individual may have been an easy prey ; however, its long term survival suggests a low predatory pressure, a hypothesis congruent with the virtual absence of carnivorous vertebrates in the fossil record of the Achiri area, where its fossils were discovered. It is likely that Plesiotypotherium achirense lived in groups, like numerous extant herbivorous ungulates.[3]

References

  1. Shockey, B.J., Croft, D.A., and Anaya, F. 2007. Analysis of function in the absence of extant functional homologues: a case study using mesotheriid notoungulates (Mammalia). Paleobiology 33:227-247.
  2. Marcos Fernández-Monescillo; Bernardino Mamani Quispe; François Pujos; Pierre-Olivier Antoine (2018). "Functional anatomy of the forelimb of Plesiotypotherium achirense (Mammalia, Notoungulata, Mesotheriidae) and evolutionary insights at the family level". Journal of Mammalian Evolution. 25 (2): 197–211. doi:10.1007/s10914-016-9372-7.
  3. Fernández-Monescillo, Marcos; Antoine, Pierre-Olivier; Mamani Quispe, Bernardino; Münch, Philippe; Andradre Flores, Rubén; Marivaux, Laurent; Pujos, François (2019-11-15). "Multiple skeletal and dental pathologies in a late Miocene mesotheriid (Mammalia, Notoungulata) from the Altiplano of Bolivia: Palaeoecological inferences". Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology. 534: 109297. doi:10.1016/j.palaeo.2019.109297. ISSN 0031-0182.
  • Villarroel C (1974) Les mésothérinés (Notoungulata, Mammalia) du Pliocène de Bolivie et leurs rapports avec ceux d'Argentine. Ann Paléontol 60:245-281
  • Y. Oiso. 1991. New land mammal locality of middle Miocene (Colloncuran) age from Nazareno, southern Bolivia. Fósiles y Facies de Bolivia - Vol. 1 Vertebrados (Revista Ténica de YPFB) 12(3-4):653-672
  • E. Cerdeño, B. Vera, G. I. Schmidt, F. Pujos, and B. M. Quispe. 2012. An almost complete skeleton of a new Mesotheriidae (Notoungulata) from the Late Miocene of Casira, Bolivia. Journal of Systematic Palaeontology 10(2):341-360
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