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Inferring habitat and feeding behaviour of early Miocene notoungulates from Patagonia

Lethaia, ISSN: 0024-1164, Vol: 44, Issue: 2, Page: 153-165
2011
  • 32
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  • 77
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Metrics Details

  • Citations
    32
    • Citation Indexes
      32
  • Captures
    77

Article Description

Notoungulates, native fossil mammals of South America, have been usually studied from a taxonomic point of view, whereas their palaeobiology has been largely neglected. For example, morpho-functional or eco-morphological approaches have not been rigorously applied to the masticatory apparatus to propose hypothesis on dietary habits. In this study, we generate inferences about habitat and feeding preferences in five Santacrucian genera of notoungulates of the orders Typotheria and Toxodontia using novel computer techniques of knowledge discovery. The Santacrucian (Santa Cruz Formation, late-early Miocene) fauna is particularly appropriate for this kind of studies due to its taxonomic richness, diversity, amount of specimens recorded and the quality of preservation. Over 100 extant species of ungulates, distributed among 13 families of artiodactyls and perissodactyls, were used as reference samples to reveal the relationships between craniodental morphology and ecological patterns. The results suggest that all Santacrucian notoungulates present morphologies characteristic of open habitats' extant ungulates. Although the Toxodontia exhibits the same morphological pattern of living mixed-feeders and grazers, the Typotheria shows exaggerated traits of specialized grazer ungulates. □Craniodental morphology, ecomorphology, fossil ungulates, knowledge discovery, South America. © 2010 The Authors, Journal compilation © 2010 The Lethaia Foundation.

Bibliographic Details

Guillermo H. Cassini; Sergio F. Vizcaíno; M. Susana Bargo; Manuel Mendoza

Scandinavian University Press / Universitetsforlaget AS

Agricultural and Biological Sciences; Earth and Planetary Sciences

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