TY - JOUR
T1 - A small extinct biter
T2 - New South American metatherian predator (Sparassodonta) from the Late Miocene of Argentina
AU - Suarez, Catalina
AU - Goin, Francisco J.
AU - Montalvo, Claudia I.
AU - Acosta, Walter
AU - Cadena, Edwin Alberto
AU - Tomassini, Rodrigo L.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2025/4/1
Y1 - 2025/4/1
N2 - A new sparassodont metatherian, Dimartinia pristina gen. et sp. nov., is described based on a specimen from the Late Miocene (Chasicoan Stage/Age) of the Argentine Pampas. The new taxon shows several characters that resemble a more generalized condition of the thylacosmilid morphology (e.g., reduced incisor formula [with no more than two incisors], laterally compressed lower canine, p1–2 homodont and smaller than p3, non-fusiform anterior portion of the horizontal ramus). For each of them, D. pristina has a generalized condition (less developed) compared to members of the family Thylacosmilidae. However, the phylogenetic analysis does not recover this new species within this family but in a more basal position, closely related to it. Our paleobiological analyses reveal that D. pristina was a small hypercarnivore with a body mass of around 3 kg. Most of its derived features, similar to those of thylacosmilids, occur at the anterior-most part of the rostrum (in the lower jaw, at the symphyseal region), suggesting that the evolution of this area involved modular developmental processes. Additionally, several pathological marks on the lateral surface of the horizontal ramus indicate that the individual suffered a traumatic bone lesion with linear lysis processes and peripheral periosteal reaction that was not remodelled. The degree of periosteal reaction allows us to estimate that the individual survived at least 15 days and no more than three months after the occurrence of the injury.
AB - A new sparassodont metatherian, Dimartinia pristina gen. et sp. nov., is described based on a specimen from the Late Miocene (Chasicoan Stage/Age) of the Argentine Pampas. The new taxon shows several characters that resemble a more generalized condition of the thylacosmilid morphology (e.g., reduced incisor formula [with no more than two incisors], laterally compressed lower canine, p1–2 homodont and smaller than p3, non-fusiform anterior portion of the horizontal ramus). For each of them, D. pristina has a generalized condition (less developed) compared to members of the family Thylacosmilidae. However, the phylogenetic analysis does not recover this new species within this family but in a more basal position, closely related to it. Our paleobiological analyses reveal that D. pristina was a small hypercarnivore with a body mass of around 3 kg. Most of its derived features, similar to those of thylacosmilids, occur at the anterior-most part of the rostrum (in the lower jaw, at the symphyseal region), suggesting that the evolution of this area involved modular developmental processes. Additionally, several pathological marks on the lateral surface of the horizontal ramus indicate that the individual suffered a traumatic bone lesion with linear lysis processes and peripheral periosteal reaction that was not remodelled. The degree of periosteal reaction allows us to estimate that the individual survived at least 15 days and no more than three months after the occurrence of the injury.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.jsames.2025.105377
DO - 10.1016/j.jsames.2025.105377
M3 - Research Article
AN - SCOPUS:85217385377
SN - 0895-9811
VL - 155
JO - Journal of South American Earth Sciences
JF - Journal of South American Earth Sciences
M1 - 105377
ER -