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Litopterna

 
(′lid·əp′tər·nə)

(paleontology) An order of hoofed, herbivorous mammals confined to the Cenozoic of South America; characterized by a skull without expansion of the temporal or squamosal sinuses, a postorbital bar, primitive dentition, and feet that were three-toed or reduced to a single digit.


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Sci-Tech Encyclopedia: Litopterna
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Hoofed herbivores confined to the Cenozoic of South America. The order was well represented from the Paleocene to the Pleistocene, and apparently arose on that continent from a condylarth ancestry. By later Paleocene time two main lines of descent were clearly demarcated. The Proterotheriidae displayed a remarkable evolutionary convergence with the horses in their dentition and in reduction of the lateral digits of their feet. In one group the foot was reduced to a single median toe by early Miocene time. The members of the Macraucheniidae were proportioned much as in the camels and by late Tertiary time had similarly lost the vertebral arterial canal of the cervical vertebrae. See also Mammalia.


Wikipedia: Litopterna
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Litopterna
Fossil range: Eocene–Pleistocene
Macrauchenia
Conservation status
Fossil
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Infraclass: Eutheria
Superorder: Meridiungulata
Order: Litopterna
Ameghino, 1889

Litopterna ("simple ankles") is an extinct order of fossil hoofed mammals (ungulates) from the Tertiary period that displays toe reduction. Three-toed, and even a one-toed horselike form developed.

This order, known only from South America, was common and varied in early faunas and persisted, in decreasing variety, into the Pleistocene. Early forms are near the condylarths, to such an extent that the litopterns might be considered merely as surviving and diversely specialized condylarths. They are suspected of being descended from South American condylarths, and therefore to have the same source as the latter. However, there is a growing number of scientists who believes the Litopterna (together with other South-American ungulates) originated completely independent from the other ungulates, thus are unrelated to the condylarths. They proposed a new clade to contain these groups: the Meridiungulata. Macrauchenia was the youngest genus of litopterns, and was the only litoptern group to survive the Great American Interchange; it died out during the Pleistocene.

The Litopterna, like the notoungulates and pyrotheres, are examples of ungulate mammals that arose relatively independently in "splendid isolation" on the island continent of South America. Like Australia, South America was isolated from all other continents following the breakup of Gondwana. During this period of isolation, unique mammals evolved to fill ecological niches similar to other mammals elsewhere. The Litopterna occupied ecological roles as browsers and grazers similar to horses and camels in Laurasia.

Contents

Families of Litopterns

  • Order Litopterna - Litopterans (all members of the order extinct South American forms)
    • Family Protolipternidae - incertae sedis
    • Superfamily Macrauchenioidea
    • Superfamily Proterotherrioidea
      • Family Proterotheriidae

Proposed ancestry

This tree shows a proposed ancestry of several mammals including the Litopterna (walvis=whale, zwijn=pig, paard=horse):

Tree showing a proposed ancestry of several mammals including the Litopterna

References

  • McKenna, M. C, and S. K. Bell. 1997. Classification of Mammals Above the Species Level. Columbia University Press, New York, 631 pp.

External links


 
 
Learn More
Proterotheriidae (paleontology)
Macraucheniidae (paleontology)
Scalabrinitherium

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