An eye for a tooth: Thylacosmilus was not a marsupial "saber-tooth predator"

Saber-toothed mammals, now all extinct, were cats or "cat-like" forms with enlarged, blade-like upper canines, proposed as specialists in taking large prey. During the last 66 Ma, the saber-tooth ecomorph has evolved convergently at least in five different mammalian lineages across both ma...

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Veröffentlicht in:PeerJ (San Francisco, CA) CA), 2020-06, Vol.8, p.e9346-e9346, Article e9346
Hauptverfasser: M Janis, Christine, Figueirido, Borja, DeSantis, Larisa, Lautenschlager, Stephan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Saber-toothed mammals, now all extinct, were cats or "cat-like" forms with enlarged, blade-like upper canines, proposed as specialists in taking large prey. During the last 66 Ma, the saber-tooth ecomorph has evolved convergently at least in five different mammalian lineages across both marsupials and placentals. Indeed, , the so-called "marsupial saber-tooth," is often considered as a classic example of convergence with placental saber-tooth cats such as . However, despite its superficial similarity to saber-toothed placentals, lacks many of the critical anatomical features related to their inferred predatory behavior-that of employing their enlarged canines in a killing head strike. Here we follow a multi-proxy approach using canonical correspondence analysis of discrete traits, biomechanical models of skull function using Finite Element Analysis, and 3D dental microwear texture analysis of upper and lower postcanine teeth, to investigate the degree of evolutionary convergence between and placental saber-tooths, including . Correspondence analysis shows that the craniodental features of are divergent from those of placental saber-tooths. Biomechanical analyses indicate a superior ability of to placental saber-tooths in pulling back with the canines, with the unique lateral ridge of the canines adding strength to this function. The dental microwear of indicates a soft diet, resembling that of the meat-specializing cheetah, but its blunted gross dental wear is not indicative of shearing meat. Our results indicate that despite its impressive canines, the "marsupial saber-tooth" was not the ecological analogue of placental saber-tooths, and likely did not use its canines to dispatch its prey. This oft-cited example of convergence requires reconsideration, and may have had a unique type of ecology among mammals.
ISSN:2167-8359
2167-8359
DOI:10.7717/peerj.9346