Paulogervaisia is an extinct genus of mammal, belonging to the family Didolodontidae. Its fossilized remains have been found in South America.

Paulogervaisia
Temporal range: Middle Eocene
~42–40 Ma
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Family: Didolodontidae
Genus: Paulogervaisia
Ameghino 1901
Type species
Paulogervaisia inusta
Ameghino, 1901
Species
  • P. inusta Ameghino 1901
  • P. porca Ameghino 1901
Synonyms
  • Paulogervaisia mamma Ameghino 1901
  • Lambdaconus porcus Ameghino 1901

Description edit

This genus is known only from fossilized teeth, and it is therefore impossible to reconstruct exactly its appearance. Compared with the remains of better known forms, such as his relative Didolodus, it can be inferred that Paulogervaisia could reach one meter in length. Paulogervaisia is characterized by a third upper molar as wide than the second, and by a metaconus in a more lingual position than the paracone. The mesostyle was smaller than in Didolodus. The third lower molar had an entoconid as large than the hypoconulid.

Classification edit

Paulogervaisia is a member of the Didolodontidae, a mysterious clade of south american mammals from the early Cenozoic, whose exact relationships are not well known. The type species is Paulogervaisia inusta, described by Florentino Ameghino in 1901, based on fossilized remains from the Chubut Province of Argentina, in Patagonia. Ameghino described two other species from the same formation ; Lambdaconus mamma and L. porca,[1] now considered as part of Paulogervaisia, and the later as a synonym of the type species. Ameghino believed that Paulogervaisia was an archaic member of the Proboscideans, a sort of link between this group and the so-called "condylarths". It was George Gaylord Simpson who recognized it as didolodontid in 1948.[2]

Bibliography edit

  1. ^ F. Ameghino. 1901. Notices préliminaires sur des ongulés nouveaux des terrains crétacés de Patagonie [Preliminary notes on new ungulates from the Cretaceous terrains of Patagonia]. Boletin de la Academia Nacional de Ciencias de Córdoba 16:349-429
  2. ^ *G. G. Simpson. 1948. The beginning of the age of mammals in South America. Part I. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 91:1-232
  • C. d. Paula Couto. 1952. Fossil mammals from the beginning of the Cenozoic in Brazil. Condylarthra, Litopterna, Xenungulata, and Astrapotheria. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 99(6):355-394
  • R. Cifelli. 1983. The origin and affinities of the South American Condylarthra and early Tertiary Litopterna (Mammalia). American Museum Novitates 2772:1-49
  • J. N. Gelfo. 2010. The "condylarth" Didolodontidae from Gran Barranca: history of the bunodont South American mammals until the Eocene-Oligocene transition. In R. H. Madden, A. A. *Carlini, M. G. Vucetich, R. F. Kay (eds.), The Paleontology of Gran Barranca: Evolution and Environmental Change through the Middle Cenozoic of Patagonia 130-142