ungulates and subungulates. ungulata subungulates –proboscidea elephants –hyracoidea hyraxes...

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Ungulates and Subungulates

Ungulata

• Subungulates– Proboscidea

• elephants

– Hyracoidea• hyraxes

– Sirenia• dugongs and manatees

• Ungulates– Perrisodactyla

• odd toed ungulates

• horses, tapirs, and rhinos

– Artiodactyla• even toed ungulates

Subungulates

• This seems to be an odd grouping of organisms. However, it is not by accident, and does not represent another ‘garbage’ group.

• Proboscideans, Hyraxes, and Sirenians are all derived from Condylarthrans, that evolved in the Paleocene about 65mya.

Subungulates

• The Paenungulata was one group within the Condylarthra, and by the Eocene of Africa, they gave rise to the Proboscidea, Sirenia, and Hyracoidea.

• If that is the case, you would expect some morphological similarities between the groups.

Subungualta• They all lack clavicles.• They all have short nails on their digits.• Females have 2 pectoral mammae (Hyraxes have 2

inguinal pairs as well).• All females have a bicornuate uterus.• All males have abdominal testes and have no baculum.• All are non-ruminating, hind gut fermenting,

herbivores. • All have a cecum.• Elephants and Sirenia have horizontal molariform tooth

replacement.

Subungulata

• Proboscideans and Sirenians were much more diverse during the Oligocene and Miocene.

• Their future does not look promising.

Proboscidea

• There is but 1 family (Elephantidae) and 2 species: African elephant - Loxodonta africana, and Asian elephant - Elaphas maximus.

• African elephants are much larger than Indian (Asian) elephants. The teeth differ, Africans have higher shoulders, larger ears, and a more complex trunk.

African vs. Asian Elephant

Proboscidea

• Reproduction is not easy– Females are sexually mature by 9 to 12 years,

with peak reproductive value between 25 and 45 years. Gestation is 22 months, but estrus lasts only 2 to 4 days, with about 4 years between estrus events.

– Copulation is no simple deal either.– There is sexual dimorphism, and young small

males generally do not reproduce.

Proboscideans

• Size of the males tusks seems to be an important character for reproduction. African elephant females look for a minimum tusk length, and will not mate with ‘short’ males even if no ‘long’ males are available. This has some implications for the ivory industry.

Proboscideans

• African elephant males weigh up to 7500kg, while Indian elephants weigh about 4500kg.

• They exhibit indeterminant growth.

• They have graviportal limbs, and are capable of one gait only.

Proboscideans

• Feldhammer claims that large size in elephants is a consequence of ‘competition’ with other herbivores.– Is this the most parsimonious explanation?– Does it reduce the importance of predation?– What about the cost of transport?

• What does large size mean for an endotherm?

Proboscideans

• Elephants are inefficient herbivores, and require large home ranges. They are usually found in groups. Thus, as they move long distances each day, they are capable of significant habitat modification.

• Consider what it means to be so large. How is it possible that 50% of what passes through the gut of an elephant is undigested?

Proboscideans

• The trunk of elephants is actually part of the upper lip and the nostrils.

• It is prehensile, and is essential since the animal can not reach the ground with its mouth.

• It is used to manipulate food, suck up water (and then spray water into the mouth), and suck up dust and mud as well.

Proboscideans

• Dental formula is 1/0, 0/0, 3/3, 3/3 = 28.

• Tusks are dentine (with only the tip covered in enamel).

• Tooth replacement is horizontal, they are worn and replaced from the rear. Note: although they have 6 molariform teeth in each jaw, only one is functional at any time.

Proboscideans

• Elephants were once much more diverse than they are today.

• In the Pleistocene they were in Europe and North America. In fact, until just recently, there were 2 species in N. America at the same time, mastadons (Mammut americanus), and Mammoths.

Proboscideans

• Oldest fossils are from the Eocene of Africa

• We have fossil evidence from Asia, Europe, Africa, and N. America.

• Moeritheriids were relatively small (1m) in Africa during the Eocene and Oligocene, while Deinotheriids were in Asia and Europe from the Miocene to the Pliocene.

Proboscideans

• The Deinotheriids had weird tusks, based on the lower incisors rather than upper.

• Gomphotheriidae were contemporaries, and had tusks in upper and lower jaws.

• Mammutidae were the mastodons from the early Miocene.

• Stegodontidae were from the mid-Miocene.

A) Moeritherium, B) Deinotherium, C) Gomphotherium, D) Wooly

Proboscideans

• Only the Elephantidae persist today.

• The genus Primelephas from the late Miocene/early Pliocene is probably ancestral to modern elephants as well as the Wooly Mammoths.

Hyracoidea

• There are 5 species of rock hyraxes, and 3 species of bush hyraxes, all inhabiting rocky habitats in Africa and the middle east.

• Were first thought to be rodents, but are clearly subungulates.

• They are not ruminants, but have a large cecum as well as a smaller paired cecum.

Hyraxes

• Have a mid-dorsal gland surrounded by light hair.

• They have unique pads on the feet, which function as suction cups on rocky surfaces. Glands on the feet provide moisture for ‘suction’

• Toes have hoof-like nails (except 2nd on rear, which has a grooming claw).

Hyraxes

• They have no canines, and have a diastemma, hence the early confusion with rodents.

• Upper incisors are pointed and triangular with no enamel on posterior.

• Unlike elephants and sirenians, dentition is not replaced horizontally.

Modern Hyrax vs. Megalohyrax

from the Oligocene. Note the diastemma in the modern form.

Rock Hyrax: Procavia capensis

Rock Hyrax: Procavia capensis

Rock Hyrax: Procavia capensis

Hyraxes

• Fossils are known from the Eocene of Europe and Africa.

• There is always the speculations that the diversity of Hyraxes suffered as a consequence of competition with ungulates. More about this later.

Sirenians

• These are the dugongs and manatees.

• 2 families: monotypic Dugongidae from western Pacific, and Trichechidae (3 species) form the Atlantic.

• Essentially tropical, feeding on aquatic vegetation.

• Poor thermoregulatory abilities and low metabolic rates - hence warm waters.

Sirenian Morphology

• Large fusiform bodies - valvular nostrils, no pinnae, horizontal tail, no external hind-limbs, and flipper-like fore-limbs.

• Dense bone to facilitate negative bouyancy.

• Lungs run nearly length of body to even out bouyant forces.

• Teeth replaced horizontally.

Stellar’s Sea Cow

(Extinct), Manatee, and

Dugong

Note position of lungs in the Manatee.

Dugongs

Manatees

Dugongs vs. Manatees

• Dugongs eat aquatic vegetation which is much softer than that consumed by manatees.

• Feldhammer uses competition to explain distribution of species.

Dugong vs Manatee

Sirenian Fossil History

• There were once at least 20 genera of Sirenians.

• There are Eocene sirenians from india, Europe, and N. America (Protosiren).

• Eocene sirenians are unique in that thay have a fifth premolar.

Dusisiren: Miocene sea cow.

Dugong vs Manatee:

Deflected rostrum in Dugong is

‘adaptation’ to bottom feeding.

Perissodactyla and Artiodactyla

• Both forms of modern ungulates are digitigrade.

• Teeth are usually hypsodont.

• Limbs operate in a single plane, and are designed for cursorial locomotion.

• Calcaneum usually does not articulate with the fibula.

A) TapirB) RhinoC) HorseD) PigE) Deer

F) CamelG) Pronghorn

Calcaneum is shaded and

articulates w/ Astragalus (H)

Perissodactyla• Horses, Tapirs, and Rhinos.

• Odd toed ungulates, with the 3rd digit bearing most of the weight (Mesaxonic).

• Teeth are usually hypsodont and lophodont.

• Horses and tapirs have upper incisors, rhinos generally do not.

• Stomach is simple, but they have a cecum. Gut retention times are half that of ruminating artiodactyls. Thus, only about 70% as efficient.

Malayan tapir

Indian Rhino

Perissodactyla: Fossil History

• The Condylarthra are ancestral to the Perissodactyla, as well as the Artiodactyla, Proboscidea, Sirenia, and Cetaceans.

• It is not necessarily true that the Perissodactyla and Artiodactyla are monophyletic.

• Based on 67 hard and soft morphological characters, we can propose the following:

Ungulate Evolution

• Note the implications:– Closest relatives of the perissodactyls are the

cetaceans.– Mammals invaded wate completely at least

twice independently (Cetceans and Sirens).– Note the close relationship between hyraxes,

elephants, and sirenians.

Perissodactyl Evoltuion

• Originally 14 families at their peak in the Eocene.

• By the end of the Oligocene there were only 4 families.

• They were the dominant ‘medium to large’ herbivores of the Tertiary.

• Both the Brontotheres and Chalicotheres went extinct.

Chalico-there: went extinct in

the Pleistocene

Note the fore-limb

dominance.

Tapirs

• Origin and early differentiation in the Paleocene

• Heptodon is one of the earliest, and comes from the Eocene of Wyoming.

• Modern Tapirus is remarkably similar to Heptodon, but bigger. Both have 4 toes in front and 3 in rear, both have ulna and fibula complete and unfused.

Tapirs

• Both Heptodon and Taprius have complete dentition w/ a small diastemma; upper canine is reduced and lateral incisor is caniniform.

• Upper molars have 3 lophs, the lower molear have 2 transverse lophs (as in Rhinos)

Malayan tapir

Tapir teeth - sort of

Tapirs

• Compare the teeth of Tapirus with those of the rhino

Black Rhino

Tapirs

• This similarity in structure is one of the reasons why tapirs and rhinos are generally considered to share a common ancestor.

• The cladogram for Perissodactyla lumps tapirs and rhinos, with horses as the outlying sister group.

Tapirs• Tapirs persist in S. America and Central

America, and in Southeast Asia. Can you explain this distribution?

• Hyrachyus (Family Hyrachyidae) may be transitional between tapirs and rhinos. It was abundant in the eocene of n. America and Europe.

• Hyracodontids and Amynodontids were abundant in the Eocene and oligocene of N. America and Asia.

Hyracodontids

• About 12 genera

• Moderate size

• Slender limbs like horses w/ light builds.

• Cursorial

• incisors were spatulate (primitive) and equal sized.

• Canines were moderate size.

Hyracodontids

• In the Oligocene, from Hyracodont lineage, came a series of gigantic hornless rhinos in the subfamily Indricotherinae

• Indricotherinae ranged from central Asia to China.

• Indricotherium was the largest land mammal to ever live.

Hyracodontids

• Indricotherium was 5.4m tall at the shoulders, had a long neck and a skull which was 1.3m long.

• Could reach vegetation 8m above the ground.

• Had a probable weight of 30 tons, 4.5 times greater than Loxodonta, and about twice as great as the largest Mammoth.

Amynodontids

• About 10 genera

• Large heavy bodies

• Short stocky limbs

• Short faces

• Prominent canine tusks.

• The bulk of the Amynodontid radiation was over by the close of the Oligocene.

Rhinocerotidae

• Hyracodontids during the Oligocene obtained a unique dental variation: chisel like I1 and tusk like I2. This formed the basis of a 2nd radiation… the Rhinocerotidae.

Rhinocerotidae

• About 50 genera

• N. America, Eurasia, and Africa from the Miocene to Pleistocene.

• Rhinocerotids included wooly rhinos and rhinos w/ horns (Elasmotherium) as long as 2m.

• Wooly rhinos show up as cave paintings by palaeolithic man.

Rhinocerotidae

• Elasmotherium’s horn was not nasal like most, but originated on the forehead. It had no incisors.

• Today, rhinos occur only in India, Java, Sumatra, and Africa.

Black Rhino

Black Rhino

Black Rhino

Black Rhino

Chalicotheres

• From the Eocene on in N. America, Eurasia, and Africa.

• Simple premolars and bunolophodont molars.

• Probably a bipedal browser.

• Had long forearms and hooked claws - very un-ungulate like.

Chalico-there: went extinct in

the Pleistocene

Note the fore-limb

dominance.

Titanotheres (=Brontotheres)

• From the early Eocene to early Oligocene of N. America and eastern Asia.

• Medium to very large size.

• Probably succeeded in Asia by Indricothere Rhinos.

• Had graviportal limbs and nasal horns which were probably covered by skin.

Horses

• Evolution of horses has been used as best example of gradualism.

• Over 55 million years, the progression from Eohippus to Equus has involved:– Increase in size from small lamb size to present size.– Reduction of toes from 3 to 1.– Increased complexity of enamel pattern on molars.

Horses

• Eohippus (= Hyracotherium)

• Eocene of N. America, W. Europe, and E. Asia.

• 4 toes fromt, 3 rear.

• Horses died out (Together w/ horse-like Tapirs) in W. Eeurope by the Oligocene. Also died out in Asia by this time.

Horses.

• In Oligocene, N. America horses are Mesohippus and Miohippus.

• Sheep size, 3 toes w/ middle digit largest.

• Snout elongating.

• Premolars beginning to look like molars w/ lophs and lophids.

Horses.

• By Miocene, Anchitherium had split off from other N. American horses, and migrated through Europe and Asia.

• By the end of the Miocene, forest-dwelling Hypohippus migrated into China.

• From Oligocene Anchitheres came the Miocene Parahippus, a precursor to mid-miocene Merychippus.

Horses.

• Merychippus is first grazer horse.

• True hypsodont cheek teeth, elaborately lophed and had cementum.

• Had fused ulna/radius and tibia/fibula to improve gallop and minimize twisting of legs.

• All later horses evolved from Merychippus.

Horses

• First successful descendent of Merychippus were the Hipparionines, which included as many as 6 lineages. They invaded the old world several times and were finally extinct by the late Pleistocene.

• In the late Miocene, Merychippus was replaced by Pliohippus, the 1st one-toed horse.

Horses

• Pliohippus gave rise to Equus during the Pleistocene of N. America, from where it radiated to the old world.

• Equus became extinct in the N. American recent. Why?

Artiodactyla

• 1/3 of all mammalian genera are Herbivores. Of these, 50% are Artiodactyla or Perissodactyla.

• Origin is probably I the Palaeocene.

• Today, there are 6 genera of Perissodactyls vs. about 80 genera of Artiodactyls.

• Whereas perissodactyls were once most diverse, artiodactyls now have significant edge. Why?

Artiodactyls

• Currently there are 12 famillies of herbivores, there are 24 extinct families.

• Origin is probably in northern continents with movements into southern ones (except Australia).

Horns, Antlers, Ossicones.

Diacodexis: early Eocene artiodactyl.

Artiodactyls

• Primary axis of support is between 3rd and 4th toes (paraxonic).

• 2nd and 5th digits are absent or non-functional.

• Pigs (Suiformes) are plantigrade, while ruminants are digitigrade (Unguligrade).

• Dentition varies from bunodont and brachydont to solenodont and hypsodont.

Artiodactyls

• Upper incisors and canines are reduced or absent.

• Suids and Tayasuids have non-ruminating stomachs while more derived families have 4 chambered ruminating stomachs.

Suiformes: Suidae

• 5 genera and 16 species.

• Simple stomachs and bunodont teeth, large ever-growing canines.

• Cartilaginous disk on snout.

• Endemic to Europe, Africa, and Asia. Introduced almost everywhere else.

Pig

Warthog, Babirusa, and Wild Boar.

Suiformes: Tayassuidae

• Least specialized of the suiformes.

• Peccaries - legs are thin and feet end in hooves. Upper canines point downward rather than upward as in pigs.

• Restricted to the New World, from the desert southwest to Argentina.

Peccaries

Suiformes: Hippopotamidae

• 2 species only.

• Little or no hair, also lack sweat glands for thermoregulation.

• They do have glandular skin that produces pigmented secretions to protect against sunlight.

• Bunodont cheek-teeth, ever-growing tusk-like lower canines and incisors, with alveoli for canines anterior to those for incisors.

Hippos

• Not ruminants, but septa in stomach increase gut retention times.

• H. amphibius grazes on land at night fo rup to 6 hrs.

• Hexaprotodon liberiensis is less aquatic.

• Both are African.

Hippo: note elevated eyes and nares.

Hippos

Pigmy hippo

Tylopoda: Camelidae

• North American origin in Eocene, extinct here by the Pleistocene.

• 3 genera and 6 species

• Dromedaries, Bactracians, Quanaco, Llama, Alpaca, and Vicugna.

• Small head, long snout, cleft upper lip, long thin neck, long legs w/ canon bone.

• Upper and lower canines, and selenodont cheek teeth.

• Toes spread out under load.

Tylopoda: Camelidae

• Outer spatulate upper incisor is retained in adults.

• 3-chambered stomachs and a cecum.

• Dromedary was once throughout the Middle East, but now exists only in domestication.

• Bactracians were once throughout Asia, but are now restricted to the Gobi.

Tylopoda: Camelidae

• Vicunas and Llamas are restricted to S. America.

• Camelids consume plants w/ high salt content, foods avoided by other grazers.

• Unique gaits in Camels.

• Heat and water strategies - the hump is not what you think.

Dromedary

Dromedary

Dromedary

Llama

Lama glama

Lama glama

Lama glama

Lama glama

Ruminantia: Tragulidae

• 3 genera and 4 species of Chevrotains in Africa and Asia.

• Most underived of all ruminants, once had a worldwide distribution.

• Mouse deer is smallest artiodactyl at 2.5kg.

• No antlers, but curved upper canines.

• 3-chambered ruminating stomach.

Tragulus napu

Ruminantia: Giraffidae

• 2 genera and 2 species: Giraffa camelopardalis and Okapia johnstoni.

• Small brachydont teeth, prehensile tongues, ossicones.

• Consider circulatory problems of great height.

Giraffa camelopardalis incisors

Ruminantia: Moschidae

• 4 species of musk deer.

• Lack antlers, but have curved canines.

• Distributed from Siberia to the Himalayas.

Musk deer

Musk deer

Hydropotes inermis: water deer F

Hydropotes inermis: water deer M

Hydropotes

Hydropotes

Hydropotes

Cervidae

• 16 genera and 42 extant species, ranging in size from the pudu at 8kg to Alces alces at 800kg.

• Absent only from sub-Saharan Africa and Antarctica, were introduced to Australia and New Zealand.

• Sexually dimorphic - males have antlers, females (except caribou) do not. Why?

Caribou

Moose cow and calf

Moose bull

Mule deer

White tail

White tail nasals

Ruminantia: Antilocapridae

• 1 genus, 1 species.

• Restricted to N. America and Mexico.

• Unique horns.

• Forage on Artemisia tridenta.

Pronghorn

Pronghorn nasals

Pronghorn

Ruminantia: Bovidae

• 45 genera and 137 species.

• 4 chambered ruminating stomachs.

• All have 2 horns except the the four-horned antelope.

• Worldwide distributin except S. America and Australia. Why?

African buffalo

Bush Buck

Caribou

Eland

Greater Kudu

Nyala

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