Hyaenodon

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Hyaenodon
Temporal range: 48.6–15.97 Ma Middle Eocene to Early Miocene
Hyaenodon horridus, Niobrara County, Wyoming, USA, Late Oligocene - Royal Ontario Museum - DSC00114.JPG
H. horridus skeleton, Royal Ontario Museum
Scientific classification e
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Hyaenodonta
Superfamily:
Family: Hyaenodontidae
Subfamily:
Tribe: Hyaenodontini
Leidy, 1869
Genus: Hyaenodon
Laizer & Parieu, 1838
Type species
Hyaenodon leptorhynchus
Laizer and Parieu, 1838
Species
List

Hyaenodon ("hyena-tooth") is the type genus of the family Hyaenodontidae, an extinct carnivorous fossil mammals from Eurasia and North America, with species existing temporally from the middle Eocene until the early Miocene, existing for about 32.63 million years.[1]

The various species of Hyaenodon competed with each other and with other hyaenodont genera (including Sinopa, Dissopsalis, and Hyainailurus), and played important roles as predators in ecological communities as late as the Miocene in Africa and Asia and preyed on a variety of prey species such as primitive horses like Mesohippus and early camels.[2] Species of Hyaenodon have been shown to have successfully preyed on other large carnivores of their time, including a nimravid ("false sabertooth cat"), according to analysis of tooth puncture marks on a fossil Dinictis skull found in North Dakota.[3]

Description[]

Some species of this genus were among the largest terrestrial carnivorous mammals of their time; others were only of the size of a marten. Remains of many species are known from North America, Europe, and Asia.[4]

Typical of early carnivorous mammals, individuals of Hyaenodon had a very massive skull, but only a small brain. The skull is long with a narrow snout - much larger in relation to the length of the skull than in canine carnivores, for instance. The neck was shorter than the skull, while the body was long and robust and terminated in a long tail.

The average weight of adult or subadult H. horridus, the largest North American species, is estimated to about 40 kg (88 lb) and may not have exceeded 60 kg (130 lb). H. gigas, the largest Hyaenodon species, was much larger, being 378 kg (833 lb) and around 10 feet (3.0 m).[5] H. crucians from the early Oligocene of North America is estimated to only 10 to 25 kg (22 to 55 lb). H. microdon and H. mustelinus from the late Eocene of North America were even smaller and weighed probably about 5 kg (11 lb).[6]

Compared to the generally larger (but closely related) Hyainailouros, the dentition of Hyaenodon was geared more towards shearing meat and less towards bone crushing.[2]

Life reconstruction of Hyaenodon horridus
Reconstruction by Heinrich Harder, around 1920
H. horridus skull
H. horridus and Leptomeryx

Tooth eruption[]

Studies on juvenile Hyaenodon specimens show that the animal had a very unusual system of tooth replacement. Juveniles took about 3–4 years to complete the final stage of eruption, implying a long adolescent phase. In North American forms, the first upper premolar erupts before the first upper molar, while European forms show an earlier eruption of the first upper molar.[7]

Range and species[]

In North America the last Hyaenodon, in the form of H. brevirostris, disappeared in the late Oligocene. In Europe, they had already vanished earlier in the Oligocene.[4]

References[]

  1. ^ PaleoBiology Database: Hyaenodon, basic info
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b Wang, Xiaoming; and Tedford, Richard H. Dogs: Their Fossil Relatives and Evolutionary History. New York: Columbia University Press, 2008.p17
  3. ^ Hoganson, John W; and Person, Jeff. "Tooth puncture marks on a 30 million year old Dinictis skull." Geo News. July 2011. p12-17.
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b Wang, Xiaoming, Qiu, Zhanxiang, and Wang, Banyue, 2005. Hyaenodonts and Carnivorans from the Early Oligocene to Early Miocene of Xianshuihe Formation, Lanzhou Basin, Gansu Province, China, Palaeontologia Electronica Vol. 8, Issue 1; 6A: 14p, online
  5. ^ WANG X. & TEDFORD R. H. 2008. — Dogs, their fossil relatives and evolutionary history. Columbia University Press: 1-219.
  6. ^ Naoko Egi (2001) Body Mass Estimates in Extinct Mammals from Limb Bone Dimensions: the Case of North American Hyaenodontids _Palaeontology 44 (3) , 497–528 doi:10.1111/1475-4983.00189
  7. ^ Katharina Anna Bastl, First evidence of the tooth eruption sequence of the upper jaw in Hyaenodon (Hyaenodontidae, Mammalia) and new information on the ontogenetic development of its dentition, Paläontologische Zeitschrift (Impact Factor: 1.1). 10/2013; 88:481-494. DOI: 10.1007/s12542-013-0207-z
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