Proailurus
Proailurus Temporal range:
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Proailurus lemanensis skull | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Mammalia |
Order: | Carnivora |
Suborder: | Feliformia |
Family: | Felidae |
Subfamily: | †Proailurinae |
Genus: | †Proailurus Filhol, 1879 |
Type species | |
†Proailurus lemanensis Filhol, 1879
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Other Species | |
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Proailurus is an extinct
Etymology
The generic name Proailurus comes from the
Description
Proailurus lemanensis was a compact and small animal, just a little larger than the domestic cat, weighing about 20 lb (9 kg). It had a long tail, large eyes and sharp claws and teeth, with similar proportions to the modern
Proailurus major is estimated to have been significantly larger, about 23 kg. The p4 tooth is stronger and the m1 is less elongated than in P. lemanensis.[1]
Proailurus bourbonnensis was a smaller species, estimated to have been 7-10 kg. Of the teeth, the p1 is wholly missing, and the m1 was slightly less elongated and the m2 less reduced than in P. lemanensis.[1]
Classification
The genus Proailurus was first described by Henri Filhol in 1879 for fossils found in the Saint-Gerand site in France. He named two species, Proailurus lemanensis, based on a mandible, and Proailurus julieni.[3] However, P. julieni was later placed in the genus Stenogale.[4][5]
In 1882, Filhol described a third species, Proailurus medius.[6] In 1888, Schlosser made "P." medius the type species of the genus Haplogale.[7] Haplogale media's placement was later confirmed by Robert Hunt's 1998 studies of aeluroid skulls.[8]
In 1999, Peigné carried out a systematic review of the genus, naming another two species, P. bourbonnensis and P. major, in the process. P. major was based on a single specimen, a left mandible from Quercy and Mainz, while P. bourbonnensis was based on a number of lower mandibles and teeth, as well as a left maxilla.[1][9]
Distribution and species
Fossils of Proailurus lemanensis were first found in Saint-Gerand and later in Quercy.[8] Robert Hunt, while measuring fragmentary fossils from Hasanda-Gol in Mongolia, placed a lower jaw fragment as Proailurus sp.,[8] but Peigne placed the fragment in nimravid genus Eofelis instead, which later authors supported,[1][9] although at least one suggested the fragment could be assigned to Pseudaelurus cuspidatus instead.[10]
P. major and P. bourbonnensis are both known from a single locality each: P. major from Saint-Gérand-le-Puy and P. bourbonnensis from Saint-Gérand-le-Puy, Weisbaden-Amoneburg, and Budenheim (where it is the only Proailurus species known from the Mainz Basin).[1]
Several fossils believed to be Proailurus-grade material have been found in North America, including the Ginn Quarry cat, known from a complete skull, which has dentition similar to Proailurus lemanensis but with a slightly larger skull. Robert Hunt also noted several specimens that he believed belonged to Proailurus-grade felids, including a pair from the Sheep Creek site in Nebraska, one a lynx-sized felid, the other closer in size to a leopard; another individual from an East Cuyumungue locality, possibly the same species as the larger Sheep Creek specimen; and another specimen from Echo Quarry.[8] However, the larger Sheep Creek specimen, the East Cuyumungue individual, and the Echo Quarry specimen were all described and assigned to the species Hyperailurictis validus in 2001,[11] and the smaller Sheep Creek material to Pseudaelurus skinneri in 2003.[12] The Ginn Quarry cat was described, but not assigned to any taxa, in 2019; though the authors did state that "it should not be dismissed as a 'proailurine-grade' felid" and suggested placing it in Hyperailurictis (despite being considerably older than any known Hyperailurictis) or a new genus.[13]
Evolution
Proailurus is believed to have evolved from earlier ailuroid carnivorans such as Stenogale and Haplogale.
Proailurus is largely considered to be the first "true" cat and the ancestor of the entire cat family. Most studies support this, placing Proailurus as the basal member of the Felidae.[15] One 2005 phylogeny placed it as a basal member of the Feliformia,[16] but later studies do not support this.[9]
References
- ^ a b c d e f Peigné, Stéphane (1999). "Proailurus, l'un des plus anciens Felidae (Carnivora) d'Eurasie: systématique et évolution". Bulletin de la Société d'Histoire naturelle de Toulouse. 135: 125–134.
- ISBN 978-0-231-10228-5.
- ^ Filhol, Henri (1879). "Étude des mammifères fossiles de Saint-Gérand le Puy (Allier)". Bibliothèque de l'École des Hautes Études, Section des Sciences Naturelles. 19 (1): 1–252.
- ^ Tielhard de Chardin, P. (1915). "Les carnassiers des phosphorites du Quercy". Ann. Paléontol. 9 (3, 4): 1–90.
- ^ Viret, J. (1929). "Les faunes des mammifères de l'Oligocene Supérieur de la Limagne Bourbonnaise". Ann. Univ. Lyon. Nouv. Sér. 47: 1–328.
- OCLC 20838884.
- ^ Schlosser, M. (1888). "Die Affen, Lemuren, Chiropteren, Insectivoren, Marsupialier, Creodonten und Carnivoren des Europaischen Tertiars". Beitr. Palaontol. Osterreich-Ungamns. 7 (Part II): 371–372.
- ^ hdl:2246/3156.
- ^ ISBN 9780199234455.
- S2CID 85951519.
- S2CID 54211452.
- S2CID 67753626.
- S2CID 150052167.
- S2CID 84497516.
- S2CID 67753626.
- .