Ancodonta is an infraorder of artiodactyl ungulates including modern hippopotamus and all mammals closer to hippos than to cetaceans (whales). Ancodonts first appeared in the Middle Eocene, with some of the earliest representatives found in fossil deposits in Southeast Asia. Throughout their evolutionary history they have occupied different browsing and grazing niches in North America, Eurasia and Africa. The last continent is notable as they were among the first laurasiatherian mammals to have migrated to Africa from Europe, where they competed with the native afrothere herbivores for the same niches. Of the nearly 50 genera that have existed, only two of them are extant – Choeropsis and Hippopotamus. The interrelationships within the ancodonts has been contended. The traditional notion is that there at minimum two families Anthracotheriidae and Hippopotamidae and were merely sister taxa. However many detailed research of the dentition among ancodonts, as well as how some anthracotheres were similar to hippos in appearance, lead the current consensus where Anthracotheriidae is paraphyletic to Hippopotamidae. Among the anthracotheres, members of Bothriodontinae are among the closest to the ancestry of hippos, with the Oligocene aged Epirigenys from Lokon, Turkana, Kenya being the sister taxon to hippos.[2][3][4] In response of this many similar clade names have been used for this clade (Hippopotamoidea, Anthracotherioidea, and Hippopotamidamorpha).[1]
Ancodonta Temporal range:
| |
---|---|
Fossil of Libycosaurus petrocchii, an anthracothere | |
The hippopotamus (Hippopotamus amphibius), a modern hippo | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Mammalia |
Order: | Artiodactyla |
Suborder: | Whippomorpha |
Infraorder: | Ancodonta Matthew, 1929 |
Genera and subclades | |
| |
Synonyms | |
The placement of Ancodonta among the artiodactyls originally based on basic morphological work that they were the sister group to pigs and peccaries, placed in the suborder Suiformes. However molecular work has found this not to be the case, as the closest relatives are the cetaceans. Cetaceans and ancodonts are now classified in the suborder Whippomorpha. This led to some theories that the last common ancestors of hippos and whales was a semiaquatic mammal, but in a 2015 genomic study that compared the genes responsible in aquatic adaptations within Whippomorpha found it to be the result of convergent evolution, as opposed to shared ancestry. This resolves the issue of how hippos and whales developed their aquatic adaptation despite modern hippos appearing much later in the fossil record than whales.[5]
The cladogram below shows the results of the phylogenetic analysis conducted by Orliac et al. (2010).[6]
Whippomorpha/Cetancodonta |
| ||||||||||||
References
edit- ^ a b Spaulding, Michelle; O'Leary, Maureen A.; Gatesy, John (2009). "Relationships of Cetacea (Artiodactyla) among mammals: increased taxon sampling alters interpretations of key fossils and character evolution". PLOS ONE. 4 (9): e7062. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0007062. PMC 2740860. PMID 19774069.
- ^ Lihoreau, F.; Ducrocq, S. (2007). "Family Anthracotheriidae". In Prothero, D.R.; Foss, S.E. (eds.). The Evolution of Artiodactyls. The Johns Hopkins University Press. pp. 89–105. ISBN 978-0-8018-8735-2.
- ^ Boisserie, J.R. (2007). "Family Hippopotamidae". In Prothero, D.R.; Foss, S.E. (eds.). The Evolution of Artiodactyls. The Johns Hopkins University Press. pp. 106–119. ISBN 978-0-8018-8735-2.
- ^ Lihoreau, F.; Boisserie, J-R.; Manthi, F. K.; Ducrocq. S. (2015). "Hippos stem from the longest sequence of terrestrial cetartiodactyl evolution in Africa". Nature Communications. 6: 6264. Bibcode:2015NatCo...6.6264L. doi:10.1038/ncomms7264. PMID 25710445.
- ^ Tsagkogeorga, Georgia; McGowen, Michael R.; Davies, Kalina T. J.; Jarman, Simon; Polanowski, Andrea; Bertelsen, Mads F.; Rossiter, Stephen J. (September 2015). "A phylogenomic analysis of the role and timing of molecular adaptation in the aquatic transition of cetartiodactyl mammals". Royal Society Open Science. 2 (9): 150156. Bibcode:2015RSOS....250156T. doi:10.1098/rsos.150156. ISSN 2054-5703. PMC 4593674. PMID 26473040.
- ^ Orliac, M.; Boisserie, J.-R.; MacLatchy, L.; Lihoreau, F. (2010). "Early Miocene hippopotamids (Cetartiodactyla) constrain the phylogenetic and spatiotemporal settings of hippopotamid origin". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 107 (26): 11871–11876. doi:10.1073/pnas.1001373107. PMC 2900691.