Phlaocyon

Phlaocyon (from Greek phlao, "eat greedily" and cyon, "dog")[1] is an extinct genus of the Borophaginae subfamily of canids native to North America. It lives from the Early Oligocene to the Early Miocene epoch 33.3–16.3 Mya, existing for approximately 17.3 million years .[2] It is closely related to Cynarctoides.

Phlaocyon
Temporal range: Early Oligocene–Early Miocene
Type specimen of Phlaocyon leucosteus
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Carnivora
Family: Canidae
Subfamily: Borophaginae
Tribe: Phlaocyonini
Genus: Phlaocyon
Matthew 1899, p. 54
Type species
P. leucosteus
Species

See text

Synonyms

Phylogeny

When discovered in the 19th century and during the following decades, Phlaocyon was thought to be ancestral to raccoons because of shared convergent adaptations toward hypocarnivorous dentitions, but Hough 1948 was the first to discover the canid nature of the middle ear region in P. leucosteus and Phlaocyon in now believed to be part of very diverse clade of hypocarnivorous canids, the Phlaocyonini, and only distantly related to raccoons.[3]

P. mariae and P. yatkolai, both known from isolated teeth and fragmentary material, are the largest and most derived species, and both display a tendency away from the hypocarnivorous dentition of the genus and towards a more hypercarnivorous dentition.[4]

Anatomy

Phlaocyon was about 80 centimetres (31 in) in body length, and looked more like a cat or raccoon than a dog, but its skull anatomy shows it to be a primitive canid. Phlaocyon probably lived like a raccoon, often climbing trees. Its head was short, wide, and had forward-facing eyes. Unlike modern canides, Phlaocyon had no specialised teeth for slicing flesh. It is thought to have been an omnivore.[5]

Species

Fossil distribution

References

Notes

  1. Wang & Tedford 2008
  2. "Phlaocyon". Fossilworks. Retrieved September 20, 2014.
  3. Wang, Tedford & Taylor 1999, p. 66
  4. Wang, Tedford & Taylor 1999, pp. 83–85
  5. Palmer 1999, p. 312
  6. "SB-1A ( of the United States)". Fossilworks. Retrieved September 20, 2014.
  7. "Buda Mine Site". Fossilworks. Retrieved September 20, 2014.

Sources

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.