Newly Discovered Fossil Fills Gap In
Giraffe's Ancestry (text in english)
Palaeontologists in Spain have
discovered the fossilized remains of a new giraffid which has helped them
better understand the lineage of the giraffid family.
The discovery, reported in PLOS ONE,
was made near Madrid, Spain. The new species has been named Decennatherium rex
and it lived during the late Miocene, around 9 million years ago, in the
Iberian peninsula. It is a surprisingly complete specimen and the researchers
are particularly interested in its skull.
There are 30 described extinct
members of the giraffid family but a lack of skulls has been a big challenge in
working out the relationships between them and their living descendants. Skulls
are extremely important in determining the relationships within clades, groups
of organisms that have a common ancestor. This finding allows researchers to
compare both its anatomical and phylogenetic data with other known species,
both living and extinct.
The skull of D. rex has four
horn-like protuberances, known as ossicones, two above the eyes and two further
back. The team believes that this specimen is the first known example of this
particular ossicone layout. This would make its genus the most basal branch of
a clade of extinct giraffids, which includes the sivatheres and the samotheres.
"New four horned extinct
giraffid Decennatherium rex from Cerro de los Batallones sheds light on the
evolution of the giraffid family and the extinct giant Sivatherium," lead
author María Ríos, from the National Museum of Natural History, Spain, said in
a statement.
Reconstruction of Decennatherium
rex. Ríos
et al (2017)
Including the Decennatherium in the
sivathere-samothere clade would make this extinct group of giraffids the most
successful that ever lived, both geographically and chronologically. They would
have existed between 9 million and a few thousand years ago, from Africa and
Europe, all the way to the Indian sub-continent.
There are currently only two living
giraffids, okapis and giraffes. Recently, genetic analyses have shown that
there are four species of giraffe. Unfortunately, all these wonderful animals
are endangered due to human activity. The current estimates suggest that their
numbers might have shrunk by about 40 percent in just the last 15 years.
Πηγή
: http://www.iflscience.com/plants-and-animals/newly-discovered-fossil-fills-gap-in-giraffes-ancestry/
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