Colpodon

{{Short description|Extinct genus of notoungulates}}

{{Automatic taxobox

| image=

| image_caption=

| fossil_range = Early Miocene (Colhuehuapian-Santacrucian)
~{{fossil range|21|17.5}}

| taxon = Colpodon

| authority = Burmeister 1885

| subdivision_ranks = Species

| subdivision =

  • C. antucoensis {{small|Shockey et al 2012}}
  • C. distinctus {{small|Ameghino 1902}}
  • C. plicatus {{small|Ameghino 1904}}
  • C. propinquus {{small|Burmeister 1885}}

| type_species = †Colpodon propinquus

| type_species_authority = Burmeister, 1885

| synonyms =

}}

Colpodon is an extinct genus of herbivorous mammal, belonging to the order Notoungulata. It lived during the Early Miocene, in what is today Argentina and Chile, in South America.

Description

This animal is almost exclusively known from cranial remains, and its general appearance is globally unknown. From a comparison with some of its better known relatives, like Scarrittia and Huilatherium, it can be supposed that Colpodon was a relatively heavy-shaped animal, with a stature comparable to that of a sheep. Its skull was rather short and tall, with a characteristic set of teeth, differing from most of its close relatives, the Leontiniidae. The upper canines were completely absent, and the incisors were well-developed bu lacking labial girdles.

Classification

Colpodon was one of the first notoungulates ever discovered. It was first described in 1885 by Hermann Burmeister, who described the genus based on two upper and two lower molars found near the mouth of the Chubut River in Argentina. Burmeister considered Colpodon as an intermediate form between Nesodon and Homalodotherium. Subsequently, Burmeister described another species of Colpodon, C. propinquus. In the early 1900s, Florentino Ameghino described other species of Colpodon, C. distinctus and C. plicatus, and believed that this animal was a member of the family Leontiniidae.{{Cite journal |last=Ameghino |first=Florentino |author-link=Florentino Ameghino |date=1902 |title=Première contribution a la connaissance de la faune mammalogique des couches a Colpodon |url=https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/part/198536 |journal=Boletin de la Academia Nacional de Ciencias en Córdoba, República Argentina |volume=17 |pages=71–141 |issn=0325-2051}} In the following years Colpodon was variously placed among Leontiniidae and Notohippidae due to its peculiar dentition with characters shared by both families ; Colpodon also had a symmetrical astragalus, like the Notohippidae. In 2012 another species of Colpodon, C. antucoensis, was described from Chile. This species is slightly more recent than the type species, and is differentiated from it by some dental characters and a narrower muzzle.{{Cite journal |last1=Shockey |first1=Bruce J. |last2=Flynn |first2=John J. |last3=Croft |first3=Darin A. |last4=Gans |first4=Phillip |last5=Wyss |first5=André R. |date=2012 |title=New Leontiniid Notoungulata (Mammalia) from Chile and Argentina: Comparative Anatomy, Character Analysis, and Phylogenetic Hypotheses |journal=American Museum Novitates |issue=3737 |pages=1–64 |doi=10.1206/3737.2 |issn=0003-0082|doi-access=free}} Moreover, other fossil remains assigned to this genus have been found in the Chichinales Formation of Río Negro Province in Argentina.{{Cite journal |last1=Barrio |first1=Claudio |last2=Carlini |first2=Alfredo A. |last3=Goin |first3=Francisco J. |date=1989 |title=Litogénesis y antigüedad de la Formación Chichinales de Paso Córdoba (Río Negro, Argentina) |url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/284902990 |journal=Actas, IV Congreso Argentino de Paleontología y Bioestratigrafía, Mendoza |volume=4 |pages=149–156}}{{Cite journal|author=Federico L. Agnolin and Pablo Chafrat |year=2015 |title=New fossil bird remains from the Chichinales Formation (Early Miocene) of northern Patagonia, Argentina |journal=Annales de Paléontologie |volume=101 |issue=2 |pages=87–94 |url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/273206896 |doi=10.1016/j.annpal.2015.02.001|bibcode=2015AnPal.101...87A }}

Colpodon is currently considered a derived member of the family Leontiniidae, a group of heavy-built notoungulates common during the Oligocene. The 2012 study showed a close relationship between Colpodon, Huilatherium and Taubatherium, two leontiniids from a tropical clade whose remains have been found in Colombia and Brazil.

References

{{reflist}}

  • G. Burmeister. 1885. Examen critico de los mamiferos y reptiles fosiles denominados por D. Augusto Bravard y mencionados en su obra precedente. Annales del Museo Nacional de Buenos Aires 3:93-174
  • F. Ameghino. 1904. Nuevas especies de mamíferos, cretáceos y terciarios de la República Argentina [New species of mammals, Cretaceous and Tertiarty, from the Argentine Republic]. Anales de la Sociedad Cientifica Argentina 56–58:1-142

{{Meridiungulata|N.|state=collapsed}}

{{Taxonbar|from=Q21078346}}

Category:Toxodonts

Category:Miocene mammals of South America

Category:Neogene Argentina

Category:Fossils of Argentina

Category:Fossil taxa described in 1885

Category:Taxa named by Florentino Ameghino

Category:Prehistoric placental genera

Category:Golfo San Jorge Basin

Category:Chichinales Formation

Category:Sarmiento Formation