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1.
Sci Rep ; 13(1): 10406, 2023 07 13.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37443318

RESUMEN

Fossil Alligator remains from Asia are critical for tracing the enigmatic evolutionary origin of the Chinese alligator, Alligator sinensis, the only living representative of Alligatoridae outside the New World. The Asian fossil record is extremely scarce and it remains unknown whether A. sinensis is an anagenetic lineage or alternatively, extinct divergent species were once present. We provide a detailed comparative description of a morphologically highly distinct Alligator skull from the Quaternary of Thailand. Several autapomorphic characters warrant the designation of a new species. Alligator munensis sp. nov. shares obvious derived features with A. sinensis but autapomorphies imply a cladogenetic split, possibly driven by the uplift of the southeastern Tibetan plateau. The presence of enlarged posterior alveoli in Alligator munensis is most consistent with a reversal to the alligatorine ancestral condition of having crushing dentition, a morphology strikingly absent among living alligatorids. Crushing dentition has been previously considered to indicate an ecological specialisation in early alligatorines that was subsequently lost in Alligator spp. However, we argue that there is yet no evidence for crushing dentition reflecting an adaptation for a narrower niche, while opportunistic feeding, including seasonal utilisation of hard-shelled preys, is a reasonable alternative interpretation of its function.


Asunto(s)
Caimanes y Cocodrilos , Animales , Tailandia , Dentición , Cráneo , Fósiles , Filogenia , Evolución Biológica
2.
Sci Rep ; 9(1): 19983, 2019 12 27.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31882616

RESUMEN

Sivaladapidae is a poorly known Asian strepsirrhine family originally discovered in Miocene sediments of the Indian subcontinent. Subsequent research has considerably increased the diversity, temporal range, and geographical distribution of this group, now documented from China, Thailand, Myanmar, Pakistan, and India and whose earliest representatives date back to the Middle Eocene. We present here a new taxon of sivaladapid from the Na Duong coal mine in the Latest Middle Eocene-Late Eocene of Vietnam. It represents the first Eocene primate from Vietnam and the first medium-sized mammal recovered from this locality, thus documenting a completely new part of the Na Duong paleobiodiversity. This taxon is the largest sivaladapid ever found with an estimated body weight of 5.3 kg and it represents a new subfamily of sivaladapids in exhibiting a very peculiar combination of dental features yet unknown in the fossil record of the family (e.g., retention of four premolars, high-crowned molars with accentuated bunodonty and extreme crest reduction). Besides documenting a complete new part of sivaladapid evolution, its primitive dental formula and derived features shared with the Early Eocene Asiadapidae reinforce the hypothesis of a basal branching of sivaladapids among strepsirrhines.


Asunto(s)
Biodiversidad , Evolución Biológica , Fósiles , Primates/clasificación , Animales , Modelos Anatómicos , Paleontología , Filogenia , Primates/anatomía & histología , Vietnam
3.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 109(26): 10293-7, 2012 Jun 26.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22665790

RESUMEN

Reconstructing the origin and early evolutionary history of anthropoid primates (monkeys, apes, and humans) is a current focus of paleoprimatology. Although earlier hypotheses frequently supported an African origin for anthropoids, recent discoveries of older and phylogenetically more basal fossils in China and Myanmar indicate that the group originated in Asia. Given the Oligocene-Recent history of African anthropoids, the colonization of Africa by early anthropoids hailing from Asia was a decisive event in primate evolution. However, the fossil record has so far failed to constrain the nature and timing of this pivotal event. Here we describe a fossil primate from the late middle Eocene Pondaung Formation of Myanmar, Afrasia djijidae gen. et sp. nov., that is remarkably similar to, yet dentally more primitive than, the roughly contemporaneous North African anthropoid Afrotarsius. Phylogenetic analysis suggests that Afrasia and Afrotarsius are sister taxa within a basal anthropoid clade designated as the infraorder Eosimiiformes. Current knowledge of eosimiiform relationships and their distribution through space and time suggests that members of this clade dispersed from Asia to Africa sometime during the middle Eocene, shortly before their first appearance in the African fossil record. Crown anthropoids and their nearest fossil relatives do not appear to be specially related to Afrotarsius, suggesting one or more additional episodes of dispersal from Asia to Africa. Hystricognathous rodents, anthracotheres, and possibly other Asian mammal groups seem to have colonized Africa at roughly the same time or shortly after anthropoids gained their first toehold there.


Asunto(s)
Hominidae , Primates , África , Animales , Hominidae/clasificación , Mianmar , Filogenia , Primates/clasificación
4.
PLoS One ; 6(4): e17065, 2011 Apr 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21533131

RESUMEN

For over a century, a Neogene fossil mammal fauna has been known in the Irrawaddy Formation in central Myanmar. Unfortunately, the lack of accurately located fossiliferous sites and the absence of hominoid fossils have impeded paleontological studies. Here we describe the first hominoid found in Myanmar together with a Hipparion (s.l.) associated mammal fauna from Irrawaddy Formation deposits dated between 10.4 and 8.8 Ma by biochronology and magnetostratigraphy. This hominoid documents a new species of Khoratpithecus, increasing thereby the Miocene diversity of southern Asian hominoids. The composition of the associated fauna as well as stable isotope data on Hipparion (s.l.) indicate that it inhabited an evergreen forest in a C3-plant environment. Our results enlighten that late Miocene hominoids were more regionally diversified than other large mammals, pointing towards regionally-bounded evolution of the representatives of this group in Southeast Asia. The Irrawaddy Formation, with its extensive outcrops and long temporal range, has a great potential for improving our knowledge of hominoid evolution in Asia.


Asunto(s)
Fósiles , Hominidae , Animales , Evolución Biológica , Mianmar
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