Groebertherium

Extinct family of mammals From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Groebertherium is a genus of dryolestoid mammal from the Late Cretaceous Los Alamitos and Allen Formations of Argentina. It is not closely related to other contemporary dryolestoids, all of which are part of the clade Meridiolestida.[2][3]

Phylum:Chordata
Class:Mammalia
Superorder:Dryolestoidea
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Groebertherium
Temporal range: Late Santonian-Maastrichtian
~84–66 Ma
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Clade: Cladotheria
Superorder: Dryolestoidea
Order: Dryolestida
Genus: Groebertherium
Bonaparte, 1986
Species
  • G. allenensis Rougier et al., 2009
  • G. stipanicici Bonaparte, 1986 (Type)
  • G. novasi Bonaparte, 1986
Synonyms[1]
  • Alamitherium Bonaparte, 2002
  • Barberenia Bonaparte, 1990
  • Brandonia Bonaparte, 1990
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Classification

Groebertherium has been consistently recovered as a dryolestoid within Dryolestida and outside of Meridiolestida, though its exact positioning varies among several studies. Rougier et al. 2011, for example, recovers it as a member of Dryolestidae, rendering it a relictual survivor of this clade with a gap of 40 million years in relation to the youngest northern dryolestids,[3] while Harper et al. 2018 recovers it as slightly closer to Meridiolestida than to northern dryolestoids.[2]

Palaeobiology

Unlike meridiolestidans, it retains a parastylar hook on its molariform teeth. Therefore, it was likely less specialised to transverse (side-to-side) mastication.[2][3] It was rather similar to Dryolestes, indicating a similar tenrec or hedgehog-like lifestyle.[3]

References

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