Rhynchotherium
Template:Short description Template:Automatic taxobox
Rhynchotherium is an extinct genus of proboscidea endemic to North America and Central America during the Miocene through Pliocene from 13.650 to 3.6 Ma, living for approximately 10 million years.[1]
This gomphothere had two tusks and may have evolved from Gomphotherium.[2]
Taxonomy
Rhynchotherium was first described in 1868 on the basis of a lower jaw from the Miocene of Tlaxcala, Mexico.[4] Later, the type species epithet R. tlascalae was erected for the jaw by Henry Fairfield Osborn in 1918. In 1921, a gomphothere skull from the Mt. Eden area of southern California was described as a subspecies of Trilophodon shepardi (a now-defunct combination for Mastodon shepardi), T. s. edensis,[5] but was subsequently reassigned to Rhynchotherium.[6] Other species subsequently assigned to Rhynchotherium included R. falconeri,[7] R. paredensis, R. browni,[8] and R. simpsoni.[9] It was the closest relative to Cuvieronius, and may be ancestral to it.[10]
Lucas and Morgan (2008) reviewed the taxonomy of Rhynchotherium and concluded that only R. edensis, R. falconeri, R. paredensis, R. browni, and R. simpsoni could be confidently referred to Rhynchotherium.[11] Because the genotype of Rhynchotherium is referable to Gomphotherium, the ICZN was petitioned to conserve the genus by designating R. falconeri as the type species,[12] which it did.[13]
Misassigned species
- Mastodon shepardi Leidy, 1871
- Mastodon euhypodon Cope, 1884 - likely a species of Gomphotherium[11]
- Tetrabelodon brevidens Cope, 1889
- Dibelodon praecursor Cope, 1893
- Rhynchotherium rectidens Osborn, 1923
- Aybelodon hondurensis Frick, 1933
- Blickotherium blicki Frick, 1933
- Rhynchotherium anguirivale Osborn, 1936
Phylogenetic position according to Mothé et al. (2016)[10]
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Life history
Rhynchotherium appears to have travelled in large mixed-age herds. At least two Rhynchotherium death assemblages, dubbed "elephant graveyards", are known from opposite sides of the continent, in California and Florida. The Florida site contains 3,000 individual fossils representing 38 individuals, including at least one complete adult and seven complete juveniles. The site appears to represent an area where Rhynchotherium herds repeatedly became trapped and died, potentially around the curve of a river that they periodically crossed. Some individuals may have also been washed into the site from upstream.[3][14]
References
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- ↑ Paleobiology database: Rhynchotherium basic info
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- ↑ a b Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ FALCONER, H. (1868): Paleontological Memoirs. Volume II: 74 –75; London (Hardwicke).
- ↑ C. Frick. 1921. Extinct vertebrate faunas of the badlands of Bautista Creek and San Timoteo Canyon, southern California. University of California Publications in Geology 12(5):277-424
- ↑ FRICK, C. (1933): New Remains of Trilophodont-Tetralophodont mastodons. – Bulletin American Museum of Natural History, 59: 505 – 652.
- ↑ OSBORN, H. F. (1923): New subfamily, generic and specific stages in the evolution of the proboscidea. – American Museum Novitates, 99: 1– 4.
- ↑ OSBORN, H. F. (1936): Proboscidea: a monograph of the discovery, evolution, migration, and extinction of the mastodonts and elephants of the world, vol. 1: Moeritherioidea, Deinotherioidea, Mastodontoidea. New York (The American Museum Press).
- ↑ OLSEN, S. J. (1957): A new beak-jawed mastodont from Florida. – Journal of the Palaeontological Society of India, 2: 131–135.
- ↑ a b Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
- ↑ a b LUCAS, S.G. & MORGAN, G.S., 2008. Taxonomy of Rhynchotherium (Mammalia, Proboscidea) from the Miocene-Pliocene of North America.- New Mex. Mus. Nat. Hist. Sci. Bull. 44: 71-87.
- ↑ LUCAS, S. G. (2010): Rhynchotherium Falconer, 1868 (Mammalia; Proboscidea): proposed conservation of usage by designation of Rhynchotherium falconeri OSBORN, 1923 as the type species. – Bulletin of Zoological Nomenclature, 67: 158 –162.
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