INVESTIGADORES
JAYAT Jorge Pablo
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
A new Akodontini (Mammalia: Rodentia: Cricetidae) from the Pliocene of Argentina: enlarging the past diversity of the sigmodontine.
Autor/es:
ORTIZ, P. E.; JAYAT, J. P.; TETA, P.; PARDIÑAS, U. F. J.; GONZALEZ, R.
Lugar:
Mendoza
Reunión:
Congreso; 4th International Palaentological Congress; 2014
Resumen:
Despite some
significant recent findings, the fossil record of South American cricetids is
still scarce and unevenly distributed across the continent. This is
particularly noticeable in the case of the Pliocene fossils, most of them
recovered from central Argentina deposits. Here we report a new Akodontini
coming from late Pliocene deposits of the Middle Unit of the Uquía Formation
(Marplatan stage) in San Roque, Jujuy province, northernmost Argentina. These
levels can be dated at about 2.5?3 Ma. The new akodontine was found in close
association with other several small vertebrates including frogs, lizards,
birds, marsupials, and caviomorph and other extinct cricetid rodents. The
studied material consists of six mandibles, two fragments of maxillae with
molar series, and a few isolated molars, representing at least three
individuals. These specimens show morphological affinities with the genera
members of the Akodon division.
However, the particular combination of characters in skull (e.g. short incisive foramina), mandible
(e.g. masseteric crest above the
middle height of the mandible, its anterior margin developed as a weak knob and
above the level of the mental foramen; capsular projection situated somewhat
backward; condyle something broad dorsoventrally; anterior point of the
symphysis at the same level or slightly above the alveolar toothrow plane) and
molars (e.g. M1 with vestigial
anteroloph and mesoloph and no trace of enteroloph in young individuals; m1
with shallow anteromedian flexid and no trace of mesolophid, ectolophid and
ectostylid, even the youngest individuals; anterolabial cingulum well
developed, arising from the anterolabial conulid) suggest that the material
belongs to an undescribed genus of small akodontine. According to the
paleoenvironmental signal from the small vertebrate assemblage, the new
akodontine would have lived in open arid environments in Puna-like or
Monte-like habitats. The discovery of an extinct akodontine related to Akodon division in the Central Andes
during the late Pliocene supports the hypothesis that this region represented
an area of diversification for the tribe or, at least, a particular episode in
the early evolution of the Akodontini. The absence in the Uquía Formation of Akodon, a genus whose species constitute
dominant elements of the recent communities in the southern half of South
America, suggests that most of the living akodontines, at least the forms with
mainly Andean distribution, radiated after the late Pliocene. The presence of
the extinct akodontine in the late Pliocene of the Central Andes indicates a
greater diversity than previously thought.

