Title Eutherian mammal systematics and the origins of South American ungulates as based on postcranial osteology
Author Horovitz, I.
Author Affil Horovitz, I., University of California at Los Angeles, Department of Organismic Biology, Ecology and Evolution, Los Angeles, CA
Source Fanfare for an uncommon paleontologist; papers in honor of Malcolm C. McKenna, edited by M.R. Dawson and J.A. Lillegraven. Bulletin of Carnegie Museum of Natural History, Vol.36, p.63-79, . Publisher: Carnegie Museum of Natural History, Pittsburgh, PA, United States. ISSN: 0145-9058
Publication Date Dec. 30, 2004
Notes In English. Includes appendices. 43 refs. GeoRef Acc. No: 288097
Index Terms South America; Astrapotheria; Cenozoic; Chordata; cladistics; Condylarthra; Eutheria; Litopterna; Mammalia; morphology; Notoungulata; phylogeny; Tertiary; Tetrapoda; Theria; Ungulata; Vertebrata
Abstract At least seven groups of ungulates occurred in South America during the Tertiary: Litopterna, Notoungulata, Astrapotheria, Xenungulata, Pyrotheria, Didolodontidae, and kollpaniine mioclaenid condylarths. Astrapotheria and Litopterna also occurred in Antarctica. Condylarths from North America and Europe are diverse and numerous and evolutionary relationships of South American ungulates with several of them have been suggested. A phylogenetic analysis of representatives of most living placental mammal orders, several groups of North American and European condylarths, and three groups of South American ungulates (Litopterna, Notoungulata, and Astrapotheria) is presented here. The analysis is based solely on postcranial characters. There is very limited information available about the postcranium of South American condylarths, xenungulates, and pyrotheres; therefore they are not included here. The cladogram indicates that litopterns and notoungulates are sister taxa, with the phenacodontid Meniscotherium as their closest North American relative; Astrapotheria would have shared a common ancestor with Periptychida.
Publication Type journal article
Record ID 85024