Thaumastocyoninae is an extinct subfamily of amphicyonids, large terrestrial carnivores, which inhabited what is now Europe during the Miocene epoch. The subfamily was erected by Hürzeler (1940), and is defined by the complete suppression of m1 metaconid, reduction of the premolars, except the p4, which is reinforced, and the oblique abrasion of the teeth, and the possession of hypercarnivorous tendencies.[1] Thaumastocyonines are poorly known, with only about 65 dental specimens, most of those isolated teeth, being known as of 2020,[2] although more complete remains have recently been discovered.[3]

Thaumastocyoninae
Temporal range: Miocene Early to Late Miocene, 23-9.1 Ma
Reconstruction of Agnotherium antiquum, Naturhistorisches Museum Mainz
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Carnivora
Family: Amphicyonidae
Subfamily: Thaumastocyoninae
Hürzeler, 1940
Genera

Evolution and phylogeny

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The first thaumastocyonines appear during the earliest Miocene epoch in the form of Crassidia intermedia, which was already the largest predator in its habitat.[4] However, they diversified following the major faunal and climatic changes of the Orleanian. The replacement of Western Europe's arid landscape with wet environments, combined with the dispersal of African and Asian taxa into Europe, lead to a reconstruction of the local faunal community. As a result, the Haplocyoninae disappeared from Europe, while their close relatives, the thaumastocyonines and amphicyonines, flourished. The Thaumastocyoninae reached their peak diversity during MN9 stage of the Vallesian, but they disappeared soon after. One possible explanation are the effects of the Vallesian Crisis, a major local extinction event as a result of the reduction of forests in favor of open habitats, which reshaped Europe's fauna.[5] Among thaumastocyonines, only Ammitocyon is known after this event.[3]

Below is a cladogram based on cranial, mandibular and dental characters, after Morales et al., 2021,[3] showing the phylogenetic relationships between the species of the subfamily:

Pseudocyonopsis landesquei

Daphoenodon superbus

Cynelos lemanensis

"Ysengrinia" americana

Thaumastocyoninae

Crassidia intermedia

Ysengrinia gerandia

Peignecyon felinoides

Tomocyon grivensis

"Ysengrinia" valentiana

Agnotherium antiquum

Ammitocyon kainos

Thaumastocyon bourgeoisi

Thaumastocyon dirus

Classification

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Name Species Age Notes
Agnotherium[5] A. antiquum MN9/10
Ammitocyon[5] A. kainos MN10 Most completely known thaumastocyonine.
Crassidia[5] C. intermedia MN1-MN2
Amphicyonopsis[5] A. serus MN6?-MN7/8 The genus is of dubious validity, and referral to this subfamily is questionable.
Peignecyon[5] P. felinoides MN3
Thaumastocyon[5] T. bourgeoisi

T. dirus

MN5-MN9
Tomocyon[5] T. grivense MN3-MN9
Ysengrinia[5] Y. gerandiana

Y. depereti

Y. tolosana

Y. valentiana

MN1-MN4 The genus is polyphyletic. Y. valentiana is more closely related to Thaumastocyon than to the type species Y. gerandiana. Y. depereti and Y. tolosana are only known from fragmentary remains, and have therefore not been included in the phylogenies, making their status unclear. Y. americana should both be excluded from the genus, and the subfamily Thaumastocyoninae.[3][6]

References

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  1. ^ Morales, J., O. Fejfar, E. Heizmann, J. Wagner, A. Valenciano, and J. Bella. 2019. A new Thaumastocyoninae (Amphicyonidae, Carnivora) from the early Miocene of Tuchořice, the Czech Republic. Fossil Imprint 75(3–4): 397–411.
  2. ^ Morlo M, Bastl K, Habersetzer J, Engel T, Lischewsky B, Lutz H, von Berg A, Rabenstein R, Nagel D. 2020. The apex of amphicyonid hypercarnivory: solving the riddle of Agnotherium antiquum Kaup, 1833 (Mammalia, Carnivora). Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 39(5):e1705848 DOI 10.1080/02724634.2019.1705848.
  3. ^ a b c d Jorge Morales, Juan Abella, Oscar Sanisidro & Alberto Valenciano (2021) Ammitocyon kainos gen. et sp. nov., a chimerical amphicyonid (Mammalia, Carnivora) from the late Miocene carnivore traps of Cerro de los Batallones (Madrid, Spain), Journal of Systematic Palaeontology, 19:5, 393-415, DOI: 10.1080/14772019.2021.1910868
  4. ^ Peigné, Stéphane; Heizmann, Elmar (2003). "The Amphicyonidae (Mammalia: Carnivora) from Ulm-Westtangente (MN 2, Early Miocene), Baden-Württemberg, Germany – Systematics andecomorphology". Stuttgarter Beiträge zur Naturkunde.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i Solé, F.; Lesport, J.-F.; Heitz, A.; Mennecart, B. (2022). "A new gigantic carnivore (Carnivora, Amphicyonidae) from the late middle Miocene of France". PeerJ. 10: e13457. doi:10.7717/peerj.13457. PMC 9206431. PMID 35726261. S2CID 248708859.
  6. ^ Morales, J., Fejfar, O., Heizmann, E., Wagner, J., Abella, J., Valenciano, A. (2019): A new Thaumastocyoninae (Amphicyonidae, Carnivora) from the early Miocene of Tuchořice Czech Republic. – Fossil Imprint 75: 397–411. https://doi.org/10.2478/if-2019-0025