Anoplotheriidae is an extinctfamily of artiodactyl ungulates. They were endemic to Europe during the Eocene and Oligocene epochs about 44—30 million years ago. Its name is derived from the Ancient Greek: ἂνοπλος ("unarmed")[1] and θήριον ("beast"),[2] translating as "unarmed beast".
Ecology
Species of Anoplotheriidae varied substantially in size. Diplobune minor is suggested to have weighted about 20 kg (44 lb),[3] while Anoplotherium is suggested to have been up to 271 kg (597 lb) in weight.[4]Anoplotherium is thought to have been a browser that reared up on its hind legs to feed,[5] while Diplobune is suggested to have been an arboreal climbing animal.[3]
Systematics and taxonomy
The family Anoplotheriidae was assigned to Belluae by Bonaparte (who named it Anoplotheriina) in 1850; to Artiodactyla by Cope in 1889, to Ruminantia by Gregory in 1910, and finally to its own superfamilyAnoplotherioidea by Romer in 1966.[6][7][8] A 2019 study considered them to be closely related to Cainotheriidae, another group of endemic European artiodactyls, with this group in turn being related to ruminants,[9] while a 2020 study found them to be more closely related to the also European endemic Xiphodontidae, again as relatives of ruminants.[10]
^ abOrliac, Maeva J.; Araújo, Ricardo; Lihoreau, Fabrice (2017). "The petrosal and bony labyrinth of Diplobune minor, an enigmatic Artiodactyla from the Oligocene of Western Europe". Journal of Morphology. 278 (9): 1168–1184. doi:10.1002/jmor.20702.
^Bonaparte, C.-L. (1850). Conspectus Systematis Mastozoologiae. Editio Altera Reformata [Survey of the system of mammals. Second revised edition].
^Cope, E. D. (1889). "Synopsis of the families of Vertebrata". The American Naturalist. 23: 1–29.
^Hooker, J. J. (1986). "Mammals from the Bartonian (middle/late Eocene) of the Hampshire Basin, southern England". Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History). 39 (4): 191–478.