Rhizocyon

Rhizocyon
Temporal range: early Oligocene
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Carnivora
Family: Canidae
Subfamily: Borophaginae
Genus: Rhizocyon
Wang, Tedford, & Taylor, 1999
Species: R. oregonensis
Binomial name
Rhizocyon oregonensis
(Merriam, 1906)
Range of Rhizocyon based on fossil distribution

Rhizocyon ("root dog") is an early member of the subfamily Borophaginae, an extinct subgroup of canids that were endemic to western North America during the Whitneyan and Arikareean stages) of the Oligocene epoch, living from ~33.3—20.6 Ma., existing for approximately 12.7 million years.

Rhizocyon was similar to a contemporary species, Archaeocyon leptodus, from the Great Plains, but it shows a few subtle differences in the structure of the skull and dentition that indicate that Rhizocyon may be close to the ancestry of later borophagines. Only a single species, R. oregonensis, is known and all fossils come from the John Day Formation in Oregon.

Morphology

Fossil specimens of two individuals' body mass were examined by Legendre and Roth.[1]

Fossil distribution

Sister genera

Notes

  1. S. Legendre and C. Roth. 1988. Correlation of carnassial tooth size and body weight in recent carnivores (Mammalia). Historical Biology

References

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