|
||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||
|
Search all papers
|
The evolution of fossoriality and the adaptive role of horns in the Mylagaulidae (Mammalia : Rodentia) Samantha S B Hopkins, University of California, Berkeley
ABSTRACT: Ceratogaulus, a member of the extinct fossorial rodent clade Mylagaulidae, is the only known rodent with
horns and the smallest known horned mammal. The function of the large, dorsally projecting nasal horns on this
burrowing animal has been the subject of wide speculation among palaeontologists; suggested uses range from sexual
combat to burrowing. Mammals have evolved adaptations for digging repeatedly; horns and other cranial appendages have
also evolved numerous times. These two adaptations co-occur in mammals extremely rarely: only two fossil genera
(Ceratogaulus and the xenarthran Peltephilus) and no extant mammals are both horned and fossorial. Tracing the
evolution of fossoriality in aplodontoid rodents (the larger clade to which Ceratogaulus belongs) reveals that
Ceratogaulus descended from ancestors who dug by head-lifting. Whereas this suggests an obvious explanation for the
horns of this rodent, evidence from functional morphology, anatomy, phylogeny and geologic context indicates that the
horns in Ceratogaulus were used for defence, rather than digging, and evolved to offset increased predation costs
associated with spending more time foraging above ground as body size increased.
SUGGESTED CITATION:
REQUIRED PUBLISHER STATEMENT:
| |||||||||||
|
||||||||||||