Nothrotherium

Extinct genus of ground sloths From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Nothrotherium is an extinct genus of medium-sized ground sloth from South America (Bolivia, Brazil and the Ware Formation, La Guajira, Colombia).[1] It differs from Nothrotheriops in smaller size and differences in skull and hind leg bones.

Phylum:Chordata
Class:Mammalia
Order:Pilosa
Family:Nothrotheriidae
Quick facts Scientific classification, Species ...
Nothrotherium
Temporal range: Early Pleistocene-Early Holocene (Uquian-Lujanian)
~1.8–0.010 Ma
Skull of Nothrotherium
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Pilosa
Family: Nothrotheriidae
Subfamily: Nothrotheriinae
Genus: Nothrotherium
Lydekker, 1889
Species
  • N. maquinense Lund, 1839
  • N. escrivanense Reinhardt, 1878
Synonyms
  • Coelodon Lund, 1838
  • Caelodon Lund, 1839
  • Coclodon Lund, 1839
  • Cyclodon Lund, 1839
  • Toelodon Lund, 1840
  • Hypocoelus Ameghino, 1891
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Taxonomy

Nothrotherium is derived from the Greek nothros [νωθρός], meaning "lazy" or "slothful," and therion [θηρίον], "beast", and the type species N. maquinense is named after the Maquiné Grotto in Brazil, where it was found. Synonyms such as Coelodon occasionally cause confusion where they occur in early texts such as that of Alfred Russel Wallace's major work, The Geographical Distribution of Animals (1876).[2] This genus formerly included the species Nothrotheriops shastensis, which was later moved to Nothrotheriops.

Palaeobiology

Palaeoecology

Analysis of δ13C values of N. maquinense remains suggests that they were specialists feeding predominantly on C3 vegetation.[3] Analysis of a coprolite associated with a N. maquinense skeleton in Brazil's Gruta dos Brejoes show it to have been a browser which fed on xerophytic leaves and fruits,[4] and it is sometimes thought to have been an inhabitant of open, peripheral forests, possibly having a semi-arboreal lifestyle, like the contemporaneous Cuban ground sloths and Diabolotherium.[5]

Palaeopathology

Based on a fossil find from Lapa dos Peixes I, the species N. maquinense is known to have suffered from calcium pyrophosphate deposition disease.[6]

Extinction

Plant material in the Gruta dos Brejoes coprolite yielded a date of 12,200 ± 120 yr BP, indicating that it survived long enough to encounter the first humans in South America and that it went extinct as part of the Late Pleistocene extinction event.[7][8]

References

Further reading

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