Bear dog

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Amphicyonids
Fossil range: Eocene - Miocene
Artist's reconstruction of a bear dog.
Artist's reconstruction of a bear dog.
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Carnivora
Suborder: Caniformia
Family: Amphicyonidae
Subfamilies

Amphicyoninae
Daphoeninae
Thanmastocyoninae

Bear dogs (amphicyonids) are extinct Carnivoran mammals of the family Amphicyonidae that lived during the Late Eocene to Late Miocene 37 to 9 Mya.

Contents

[edit] Taxonomy

While the Amphicyonidae have traditionally been viewed as closely related to the Ursidae (bears), some evidence suggests that they may instead be basal caniforms. (Hunt, 2004b). They were about as tall as the American black bear and were most likely ambushers due to the fact that their legs were made for short, sudden bursts of speed. The bear-dog also nested their young in nests underneath the ground.

During the early Miocene, a number of large amphicyonids migrated from Eurasia into North America. These taxa belong to the Old World amphicyonid sub-family Amphicyoninae. The earliest to appear is the large beardog Ysengrinia Ginsburg, followed by Cynelos Jourdan, and then by Amphicyon. This influx of amphicyonines, accompanied by other Old World ungulates and small mammals, indicates a prolonged interval (from 23 to 16.5 Ma) of faunal exchange between Asia and North America in the early Miocene, using the trans-Beringian route (Hunt, 2004a). New World daphoenines (Daphoenodon, Borocyon) and temnocyonines coexisted with Old World amphicyonines (Ysengrinia, Amphicyon, Cynelos) 23.7-17.5 million years ago. These are the largest terrestrial carnivorans (50–100 kg) that evolved on the North American continent up to this time. The immigrant amphicyonines Ysengrinia, Cynelos and Amphicyon appear at 23, 19.2, and 18.8 Ma, respectively, and herald the beginning of a Eurasian amphicyonine migration into North America that continued into the mid-Miocene (Hunt, 2004b).

[edit] Evolutionary history


[edit] Classification

  • Family Amphicyonidae
    • Subfamily Amphicyoninae
      • Genus Agnotherium
        • A. antiquus
        • A. grivense
      • Genus Amphicyon
        • A. frendens
        • A. bohemicus
        • A. castellanus
        • A. caucasicus
        • A. galushai
        • A. giganteus
        • A. ingens
        • A. intermedius (type)
        • A. laugnacensis
        • A. longiramus
        • A. major
        • A. pontoni
        • A. reinheimeri
        • A. riggsi
        • A. tairumensis
        • A. ulungurensis
      • Genus Amphicyonopsis
        • A. serus
      • Genus Brachycyon
        • B. reyi
        • B. palaeolycos
        • B. gaudryi
      • Genus Cynelos
        • C. caroniavorus
        • C. crassidens
        • C. helbingo
        • C. idoneus
        • C. jourdan
        • C. lemanensis
        • C. pivetaui
        • C. rugosidens
        • C. schlosseri
        • C. sinapius
      • Genus Cynodictis
        • C. lacustris
      • Genus Euroamphicyon
        • E. olisiponensis
      • Genus Gobicyon
        • G. macrognathus
        • G. zhegalloi
      • Genus Guangxicyon
        • G. sinoamericanus
      • Genus Haplocyon
        • H. elegans
        • H. crucians
      • Genus Haplocyonoides
        • H. mordax
        • H. serbiae
        • H. ponticus
      • Genus Haplocyonopsis
      • Genus Harpagocyon
      • Genus Heducides
      • Genus Ischyrocyon
        • I. gidleyi
      • Genus Paradaphoenus
        • P. cuspigerus
        • P. minimus
        • P. tooheyi
      • Genus Pericyon
      • Genus Pliocyon
        • P. medius
        • P. robustus
      • Genus Proamphicyon
      • Genus Protemnocyon
      • Genus Pseudarctos
        • P. bavaricus
      • Genus Pseudamphicyon
        • P. bavaricus
      • Genus Pseudocyon
        • P. sansaniensis
        • P. steinheimensis
        • P. styriacus
      • Genus Pseudocyonopsis
        • P. ambiguus
        • P. antiquus
        • P. quercensis
      • Genus Symplectocyon
      • Genus Ysengrinia
        • Y. americanus
        • Y. depereti
        • Y. geraniana
        • Y. ginsburg
        • Y. tolosana
    • Subfamily Daphoeninae(North America)
      • Genus Adilophontes
        • A. brachykolos
      • Genus Borocyon
      • Genus Brachyrhyncocyon
        • B. dodgei
        • B. montanus
      • Genus Daphoenictis
        • D. tedfordi
      • Genus Daphoenodon
        • D. falkenbachi
        • D. notionastes
        • D. robustum
        • D. periculosus
        • D. skinneri
        • D. superbus
      • Genus Daphoenus
        • D. dodgei or Daphoenocyon dodgei
        • D. felinus
        • D. hartshornianus
        • D. inflatus
        • D. lambei
        • D. nebrascensis
        • D. socialis
        • D. transversus
        • D. vetus
      • Genus Paradaphoenus
        • P. cuspigerus
        • P. minimus
        • P. tooheyi
    • Subfamily Temnocyoninae(North America)
      • Genus Mammacyon
        • M. obtusidens
      • Genus Temnocyon
        • T. altigenis
        • T. ferox
        • T. percussor
        • T. venator
    • Subfamily Thanmastocyoninae

[edit] References

  • Hunt, Robert M, Jr. (2004a) "Intercontinental Migration of Large Mammalian Carnivores: Earliest Occurrence of the Old World Beardog Amphicyon (Carnivora, Amphicyonidae) in North America." in Cenozoic Carnivores and Global Climate by Robert M. Hunt, Jr.[1]
  • Hunt, Robert M, Jr. (2004b) "Global Climate and the Evolution of Large Mammalian Carnivores during the Later Cenozoic in North America" in Cenozoic Carnivores and Global Climate by Robert M. Hunt, Jr.[2]

[edit] See also

[edit] External links