INVESTIGADORES
CHIMENTO NicolÁs Roberto
artículos
Título:
The Patagonian fossil mammal Necrolestes: a Neogene survivor of Dryolestoidea
Autor/es:
CHIMENTO, N. R.; AGNOLIN, F. L.; NOVAS, F. E.
Revista:
Revista del Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturales
Editorial:
Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturales "Bernardino Rivadavia"
Referencias:
Lugar: Buenos Aires; Año: 2012 vol. 14 p. 261 - 306
ISSN:
1514-5158
Resumen:
Necrolestes is an enigmatic Miocene South American mammal that is the size of a shrew, the phyloge- netic relationships of which constituted a matter of debate since its original description in 1891. This taxon has been variously related to the Chrysochloroidea, Palaeanodonta, Xenarthra, Gondwanatheria, and Metatheria. However, Necrolestes exhibits fossorial adaptations in combination with cranial, postcranial, and dental features that are remarkably plesiomorphic for a therian mammal. This led several authors to consider Necrolestes as a Theria incertae sedis, Tribosphenida incertae sedis, and even as a Mammalia incertae sedis. We present evi- dence in support that Necrolestes belongs to the Dryolestoidea, an extinct group of basal cladotherians that were abundant and widespread from the Late Jurassic through the Late Cretaceous. Recent discoveries demon- strated that the South American continent was a cradle for the evolutionary radiation of dryolestoid mammals at the end of the Cretaceous. Moreover, it become evident that some of these early mammals persisted across the K-P boundary, as illustrated by the peligrotheriid dryolestoid Peligrotherium, documented in Paleocene beds of Patagonia. A comprehensive cladistic analysis of living and fossil mammals depicts Necrolestes as a member of the dryolestoid subclade Meridiolestida, thus amplifying the morphological disparity of this lineage of southern dryolestoids, including dog-sized bunodontian forms (i.e., Peligrotherium), alongside with small-sized insecti- vores (i.e., Necrolestes). Present study solves the enigma that for the last 120 years surrounded the phylogenetic relationships of the bizarre mammal Necrolestes, also demonstrating the unexpected survival of South American dryolestoids up to Miocene times. Key words: Necrolestes, Dryolestoidea, Meridiolestida, Miocene, Patagonia.