Oscar Affholder, Pierre-Olivier Antoine, Robin M.D. Beck
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The “Diahot Tooth” is a Miocene rhinocerotid fossil brought by humans to New Caledonia
The “Diahot Tooth” is an isolated postcanine tooth of a large herbivorous mammal, discovered in the Diahot region of northern New Caledonia in 1875. Most authors have identified it as an upper premolar of a rhinocerotid, but an alternative proposal is that it belongs to a diprotodontoid marsupial that has been named Zygomaturus diahotensis. Either possibility raises biogeographical difficulties, because New Caledonia has been isolated from other major landmasses for 80 million years, and neither rhinocerotids nor diprodotontoids appear to be good candidates for such a long-distance overwater dispersal event. Here, we present a novel interpretation of the affinities and origin of the Diahot Tooth, based on qualitative study of its preserved morphology and quantitative phylogenetic analyses that include both rhinocerotids and diprotodontoids. We show that the Diahot Tooth most closely resembles the first deciduous premolar of Western Eurasian Miocene teleoceratine rhinocerotid Brachypotherium brachypus, with the few discrepancies relating to traits that are known to be variable in B. brachypus. Our phylogenetic analyses also support this relationship. The preservation of the Diahot Tooth closely resembles that of B. brachypus teeth from the “Faluns Sea” of the Loire basin, and we propose that the New Caledonian specimen originated there and was taken to New Caledonia by a European colonist during the mid-19th century, where it was lost, rediscovered, and incorrectly assumed to be autochthonous.
期刊介绍:
Journal of Mammalian Evolution is a multidisciplinary forum devoted to studies on the comparative morphology, molecular biology, paleobiology, genetics, developmental and reproductive biology, biogeography, systematics, ethology and ecology, and population dynamics of mammals and the ways that these diverse data can be analyzed for the reconstruction of mammalian evolution. The journal publishes high-quality peer-reviewed original articles and reviews derived from both laboratory and field studies. The journal serves as an international forum to facilitate communication among researchers in the multiple fields that contribute to our understanding of mammalian evolutionary biology.