Megantereon

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Megantereon
Fossil range: Early Pliocene to Middle Pleistocene

Conservation status
Fossil
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Carnivora
Family: Felidae
Subfamily: Machairodontinae
Genus: Megantereon
Croizet & Jobert, 1828

Megantereon was an ancient machairodontine saber-toothed cat that may be the ancestor of Smilodon.

Contents

[edit] Fossil range

Fossil fragments have been found in Africa, Eurasia, and North America. Megantereon probably first appeared in the early Pliocene roughly 4.5 million years ago in North America, where it is represented by Megantereon cultridens. About 3-3.5 Million years ago it is firmly recorded also from Africa and Eurasia. At the end of the Pliocene it evolved into the larger Smilodon in North America, while it survived in the Old World until the middle Pleistocene. The youngest remains from east Africa are about 1.5 million years old. In southern Africa the genus is recorded from Elandsfontein, a site dated to around 700,000-400,000 years old. Remains from Untermaßfeld show that Megantereon lived until 900,000 years ago in Europe. In Asia it may have survived until 500,000 years ago, as it is recorded together with Homo erectus at the famous site of Zho-Khou-Dien in China. The only full skeleton was found in Senéze, France.

[edit] Physiology

Megantereon was built like a modern jaguar or somewhat heavier. It had stocky forelimbs with the lower half of these forelimbs lion-sized. It had large neck muscles designed to power a devastating bite. The elongated upper canines were protected by flanges at the mandible. The largest specimens with an estimated body weight of 90-150 kg (average 120 kg) are known from India. Medium sized forms of Megantereon are known from other parts of Eurasia and the Pliocene of North America. The smallest forms from Africa und the lower Pleistocene of Europe have been estimated to only 60-70 kg.[1] However, other sources estimated Megantereon from the European lower Pleistocene at 100-160 kg.[2]

[edit] Hunting techinque

It is unlikely that Megantereon simply bit its prey as the long, sabre-teeth that Smilodon is famed for are not strong enough leave buried inside a struggling prey animal: the teeth would break off. It is possible that they bit their prey and then allowed it to bleed to death, but then they would have to protect that animal from other predators and thus their tactic for killing remains uncertain. It is now generally thought that Megantereon, like other saber-toothed cats, used it's long saber teeth to deliver a killing throat bite, severing most of the major nerves and blood vessels. While the teeth would still risk damage, the prey animal would be killed quickly enough that any struggles would be feeble at best.[3]

[edit] Species

The number of species is unclear, with some known from only fragmentary evidence. Some researchers have argued that three species should be distinguished: M. cultridens from North America, Asia (except the Indian subcontinent) and the European Pliocene, M. whitei from Africa and the European Lower Pleistocene and M. falconeri from India.[4] Therefore, the true number of species may be less than the full list of described species reproduced below.[5]

  • Megantereon nihowanensis - probably a junior synonym of M cultridens
  • Megantereon cultridens
  • Megantereon whitei
  • Megantereon gracile
  • Megantereon eurynodon
  • Megantereon megantereon
  • Megantereon vakhshensis
  • Megantereon ekidoit
  • Megantereon falconeri

[edit] Popular Culture

Megantereon was depicted in a Discovery Channel TV Series, Before We Ruled the Earth, as a nocturnal hunter that preyed on Homo ergaster.

[edit] Literature

  • A. Turner: The big cats and their fossil relatives. Columbia University Press, 1997, ISBN 0-231-10229-1
  • Jordi Augusti: Mammoths, Sabertooths and Hominids 65 Million Years of Mammalian Evolution in Europe. Columbia University Press, 2002, ISBN 0-231-11640-3

[edit] References

  1. ^ B. M. Navarro and P. Palmqvist: Presence of the African Machairodont Megantereon whitei (Broom, 1937) (Felidae, Carnivora, Mammalia) in the Lower Pleistocene Site of Venta Micena (Orce, Granada, Spain), with some Considerations on the Origin, Evolution and Dispersal of the Genus. Journal of Archaeological Science (1995) 22, 569-582.
  2. ^ N. Garcia and E. Virgos: Evolution of community in several carnivore palaeoguilds from the European Pleistocene: the role of intraspecific competition. Lethaia 40 (2007)
  3. ^ Turner, Alan (1997). The Big Cats and their fossil relatives. New York: Columbia University Press, 55. ISBN 0-231-10228-3. 
  4. ^ B. M. Navarro and P. Palmqvist: Presence of the African Machairodont Megantereon whitei (Broom, 1937) (Felidae, Carnivora, Mammalia) in the Lower Pleistocene Site of Venta Micena (Orce, Granada, Spain), with some Considerations on the Origin, Evolution and Dispersal of the Genus. Journal of Archaeological Science (1995) 22, 569-582.
  5. ^ Turner, A (1987). "Megantereon cultridens (Cuvier) (Mammalia, Felidae, Machairodontinae) from Plio-Pleistocene Deposits in Africa and Eurasia, with Comments on Dispersal and the Possibility of a New World Origin". Journal of Paleontology 61 (6): 1256–1268.