Sánchez Israel M, Cantalapiedra Juan L, Ríos María, Quiralte Victoria, Morales Jorge
Departamento de Paleobiología, Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales-CSIC, Madrid, Spain.
Leibniz-Institut für Evolutions und Biodiversitätsforschung, Museum für Naturkunde, Berlin, Germany.
PLoS One. 2015 Dec 2;10(12):e0143034. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0143034. eCollection 2015.
Palaeomerycids were strange three-horned Eurasian Miocene ruminants known through fossils from Spain to China. We here study their systematics, offering the first cladistic phylogeny of the best-known species of the group, and also reassess their phylogenetic position among ruminants, which is currently disputed. The beautifully preserved remains of a new palaeomerycid from middle Miocene deposits of Spain, Xenokeryx amidalae gen. et sp. nov., helps us to better understand palaeomerycid anatomy, especially that of the nuchal region in the skull, significantly improving our current knowledge on these enigmatic ruminants. Our results show two main lineages of palaeomerycids, one containing the genus Ampelomeryx diagnosed by a characteristic type of cranium / cranial appendages and some dental derived traits, and another one that clusters those forms more closely related to Triceromeryx than to Ampelomeryx, characterized by a more derived dentition and a set of apomorphic cranial features. Xenokeryx branches as a basal offshoot of this clade. Also, we find that Eurasian palaeomerycids are not closely related to North American dromomerycids, thus rejecting the currently more accepted view of palaeomerycids as the Eurasian part of the dromomerycid lineage. Instead of this, palaeomerycids are nested with the African Miocene pecoran Propalaeoryx and with giraffoids. On the other hand, dromomerycids are closely related to cervids. We define a clade Giraffomorpha that includes palaeomerycids and giraffids, and propose an emended diagnosis of the Palaeomerycidae based on cranial and postcranial characters, including several features of the cranium not described so far. We also define the Palaeomerycidae as the least inclusive clade of pecorans containing Triceromeryx and Ampelomeryx. Finally, we reassess the taxonomy of several palaeomerycid taxa.
古鹿科动物是中新世时期生活在欧亚大陆的奇特的、长有三只角的反刍动物,从西班牙到中国都有其化石被发现。我们在此研究它们的系统分类,给出该类群最知名物种的首个分支系统发育树,同时重新评估它们在反刍动物中的系统发育位置,目前这一位置存在争议。在西班牙中新世中期沉积物中发现的一种保存精美的新古鹿科动物——阿米达拉异角鹿(Xenokeryx amidalae),属名及种名都是新的,它有助于我们更好地了解古鹿科动物的解剖结构,尤其是头骨颈部区域的结构,极大地增进了我们目前对这些神秘反刍动物的认识。我们的研究结果显示古鹿科动物有两个主要谱系,一个谱系包含以一种独特的颅骨/颅附属结构以及一些牙齿衍生特征为诊断依据的葡萄古鹿属(Ampelomeryx),另一个谱系则是将那些与三角古鹿(Triceromeryx)关系比与葡萄古鹿关系更密切的物种聚类在一起,其特征是有更进化的齿列和一系列的近裔性状颅骨特征。异角鹿是这个分支的基部旁支。此外,我们发现欧亚大陆的古鹿科动物与北美奔鹿科动物没有密切关系,因此否定了目前更被接受的观点,即古鹿科动物是奔鹿科谱系的欧亚部分。相反,古鹿科动物与非洲中新世的鹿总科原古鹿(Propalaeoryx)以及长颈鹿类动物归为一类。另一方面,奔鹿科动物与鹿科动物关系密切。我们定义了一个包括古鹿科动物和长颈鹿科动物的长颈鹿形态类群,并基于颅骨和颅后特征对古鹿科进行了修订诊断,包括一些迄今为止未描述过的颅骨特征。我们还将古鹿科定义为包含三角古鹿和葡萄古鹿的鹿总科中包容性最小的类群。最后,我们重新评估了几个古鹿科分类单元的分类。