Adriana Linares-Martín, Marc Furió, Bruno Gómez de Soler, Jordi Agustí, Oriol Oms, Federica Grandi, Hugues-Alexandre Blain, Elena Moreno-Ribas, Pedro Piñero, Gerard Campeny
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引用次数: 0
摘要
伊比利亚半岛东北部Camp dels Ninots的上新世Konservat-Lagerstätten maar湖遗址最近发现了一具鼹鼠(Talpidae科)的部分骨骼,其中有许多解剖学上的联系。乍一看,臼齿和肱骨的大小、地质时间间隔和地理位置表明,该标本可能属于小Talpa。然而,在对粘土块进行一些机械准备(去除基质、固结和清洗)和显微ct扫描后,这个保存完好的标本原来是一个未知的物种。由此产生的这种新形态的三维模型,Vulcanoscaptor ninoti gen. et sp. nov.,揭示了一些特殊的牙齿、下颌骨和后颅元素的形态特征,根据所进行的系统发育分析,将这个新物种分配到Scalopini部落。这是令人惊讶的,因为这个部落中这个新物种最近的亲戚现在生活在北美,以前只有一些相关的分类群在渐新世和中新世的欧洲化石记录中被报道过。该标本的颅后构造揭示了由复杂的前肢结构支撑的高度穴居生活方式。这样一种专门的挖掘动物是如何到达马尔湖沉积物并最终被保存下来的仍有待解决。一些假说考虑到了这种灭绝物种的游泳能力。或者,这个标本可能是漂浮的或被清除的尸体的剩余部分,其残骸落入湖中并到达缺氧的底部。
An unexpected Scalopini mole (Talpidae, Mammalia) from the Pliocene of Europe sheds light on the phylogeny of talpids.
The Pliocene Konservat-Lagerstätten maar lake site of Camp dels Ninots (NE Iberian Peninsula) has recently delivered a partial skeleton of a mole (family Talpidae) with many elements in anatomical connection. At a first glance, molar and humerus size, geological time interval, and geographical location suggested that this specimen could correspond to Talpa minor. However, after some mechanical preparation of the clay block (matrix removal, consolidation, and cleaning) and a micro-CT scan, this excellently preserved specimen turned out to be an unknown species to science. The resulting 3D models of this new form, Vulcanoscaptor ninoti gen. et sp. nov., revealed some peculiar morphological traits in teeth, mandible, and postcranial elements, which according to the phylogenetic analysis carried out, would allocate this new species within the tribe Scalopini. This is surprising, because the closest relatives of the new species within this tribe live nowadays in North America, and only some related taxa had been previously reported in the Oligocene and Miocene fossil record from Europe. The postcranial construction of this specimen reveals a highly fossorial lifestyle supported by a complex forelimb structure. How such a specialized digging animal reached the maar lake sediments where it was finally preserved is still to be solved. Some hypotheses consider swimming abilities for this extinct species. Alternatively, this specimen could be the remaining portions of a floated or scavenged carcass whose remains fell into the lake and reached the anoxic bottom.
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