Watutia
{{Short description|Extinct genus of marsupials}}
{{Speciesbox
| fossil_range = {{fossilrange|Pliocene}}
| genus = Watutia
| parent_authority = Flannery, Hoch & Aplin, 1989
| species = novaeguinae
| authority = Flannery, Hoch & Aplin, 1989
}}
Watutia{{cite web | author = Flannery, Hoch & Aplin| date = 1989 | accessdate = 28 February 2020 | title = Mikko's Phylogeny Archive: Macropodidae - kenguroos | url = http://www.fmnh.helsinki.fi/users/haaramo/Metazoa/Deuterostoma/Chordata/Synapsida/Metatheria/Notometatheria/Diprotodontia/Macropodidae.htm | url-status = dead | archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20070331021022/http://www.fmnh.helsinki.fi/users/haaramo/metazoa/Deuterostoma/chordata/Synapsida/Metatheria/Notometatheria/Diprotodontia/Macropodidae.htm | archivedate = 31 March 2007 }} is an extinct genus of fossil kangaroo known from the Pliocene from New Guinea.{{cite journal|last1=Kear|first1=B.P.|last2=Cooke|first2=B.N.|date=2001|title=A review of macropodoid systematics with the inclusion of a new family|url=https://www.academia.edu/3717911|journal=Memoirs of the Association of Australasian Palaeontologists|volume=25|pages=83–101|issn=0810-8889}} It is only known from the type species Watutia novaeguineae, known from some fragmentary upper and lower jaws and isolated teeth from the Pliocene Otibanda Formation in the Morobe Province of Papua New Guinea. The closest relative of the genus was possibly Hadronomas, who lived in today's Queensland a few million years earlier. W. novaeguineae was about the size of a large shrub wallaby (Dorcopsis) and differs in some characteristics from the teeth of other kangaroos. The molars were low and the first premolars elongated.{{cite journal|first1=T. F.|last1=Flannery|first2=E. |last2=Hoch|first3=K.|last3=Aplin|date=1989|title=Macropodines from the Pliocene Otibanda Formation, Papua New Guinea|url=https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/03115518908619048?journalCode=talc20|journal=Alcheringa|volume=13|issue=2|pages=145–152|doi=10.1080/03115518908619048|bibcode=1989Alch...13..145F |url-access=subscription}} Cristids obliqua and posterior cingula are missing on the lower molars. The feature that defines the close association with Hadronomas was the upper first premolar, which was more bulbous with no lingual cingulum, differing it from most Macropods.
References
{{Reflist}}
{{Phalangerida|M.}}
{{Taxonbar|from=Q18155971|from2=Q2244042}}
Category:Prehistoric macropods
Category:Pliocene mammals of Australia
Category:Pleistocene marsupials
Category:Prehistoric marsupial genera
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{{Diprotodont-stub}}