T. chapadmalensis Cione & Tonni, 1995 (lapsus calami)
T. chapalmalalensis Oliva & Cerdeno, 2007 (lapsus calami)
T. ensenadensis
T. giganteus Moreno, 1888
T. elongatus Roth, 1898
T. gracilis
T. voghti Moreno, 1888
Toxodon (meaning "bow tooth" in reference to the curvature of the teeth) is an extinctgenus of large ungulate native to South America from the Pliocene to the end of the Late Pleistocene.[1][2]Toxodon is a member of Notoungulata, an order of extinct South American native ungulates distinct from the two living ungulate orders that had been indigenous to the continent for over 60 million years since the early Cenozoic, prior to the arrival of living ungulates into South America around 2.5 million years ago during the Great American Interchange.[3]Toxodon is a member of the family Toxodontidae, which includes medium to large sized herbivores.[4]Toxodon was one of the largest members of Toxodontidae and Notoungulata, with Toxodon platensis having an estimated body mass of 1,000–1,200 kilograms (2,200–2,600 lb).
Remains of Toxodon were first collected by Charles Darwin during the voyage of the Beagle in 1832-33, and later scientifically named by Richard Owen in 1837. Both Darwin and Owen were puzzled by Toxodon's unusual anatomical features, including its long, ever-growing cheek teeth.
Toxodon has been found across much of South America, excluding southern Patagonia, the Andes and northeastern-most region of the continent.[5] Evidence suggests that Toxodon was ecologically plastic and able to adapt its diet to local conditions.[6]
Toxodon became extinct as part of the end-Pleistocene extinctions around 12,000 years ago, along with most large mammals across the Americas. The extinctions followed the arrival of humans to South America, who may have been a contributory factor in the extinctions.[3] Several sites have been found suggesting human interaction with Toxodon.
Taxonomy and evolution
Charles Darwin, who was in South America as part of the second voyaging expedition of the HMS Beagle, was one of the first to collect Toxodon fossils.[7] In September-October 1832 and October 1833, Darwin collected several isolated teeth as well as a mandible from various localities in northern Argentina.[7] On November 26, 1833, Darwin paid 18 pence (equivalent to £6.40 in 2018[8]) for a T. platensis skull from a farmer in Uruguay.[9][10] In his book covering the expedition, The Voyage of the Beagle. Darwin wrote, "November 26th – I set out on my return in a direct line for Montevideo. Having heard of some giant's bones at a neighbouring farm-house on the Sarandis, a small stream entering the Rio Negro, I rode there accompanied by my host, and purchased for the value of eighteen pence the head of the Toxodon." The skull had been propped up against a fence and been used as target practice for throwing stones by local children, who had knocked out its teeth.[11][8] Since Darwin discovered that the fossils of similar mammals of South America were different from those in Europe, he invoked many debates about the evolution and natural selection of animals.
In his own words, Darwin wrote down in his journal,
Lastly, the Toxodon, perhaps one of the strangest animals ever discovered: In size it equaled an elephant or megatherium, but the structure of its teeth, as Mr. Owen states, proves indisputably that it was intimately related to the Gnawers, the order which, at the present day, includes most of the smallest quadrupeds: In many details it is allied to the Pachydermata: Judging from the position of its eyes, ears, and nostrils, it was probably aquatic, like the Dugong and Manatee, to which it is also allied. How wonderfully are the different Orders, at the present time so well separated, blended together in different points of the structure of the Toxodon!
Toxodon and its type species, T. platensis, were described in 1837 by Richard Owen based on remains collected by Darwin, in a paper titled "A description of the cranium of the Toxodon platensis, a gigantic extinct mammiferous species, referrible by its dentition to the Rodentia, but with affinities to the Pachydermata and the herbivorous Cetacea", reflecting the many unusual characteristics of its anatomy.[7]
Evolution
Toxodon is a member of Notoungulata, a group of South American native ungulates that had been part of the fauna of South America since the Paleocene, over 60 million years ago, and had evolved in isolation in South America, prior to the arrival of living ungulates in South America around 2.5 million years ago as part of the Great American Interchange.[3] Notoungulata represents the most diverse group of indigenous South American ungulates, with over 150 described genera in 13 different families.[12] Notoungulates are morphologically diverse, including forms morphologically distant from Toxodon such as rodent and rabbit-like forms.[3]
Analysis of collagen sequences obtained from Toxodon as well as from Macrauchenia, a member of another indigenous South American ungulate order, Litopterna, found that notoungulates and litopterns were closely related to each other, and form a sister group to perissodactyls (which contains equids, rhinoceroses and tapirs) as part of the clade Panperissodactyla, making them true ungulates.[13][14] This finding has been corroborated by an analysis of mitochondrial DNA extracted from a Macrauchenia fossil, which yielded a date of 66 million years ago for the time of the split from perissodactyls.[15]
Toxodon belongs to Toxodontidae, a large bodied group of notoungulates which first appeared in the Late Oligocene (Deseadan), ~28-23 million years ago,[16] and underwent a great radiation during the Miocene epoch (~23-5.3 million years ago), when they reached their apex of diversity.[17] The diversity of toxodontids, along with other notoungulates began to decline from around the Pliocene onwards,[3] possibly as a result of climate change, as well as the arrival of competitors and predators from North America during the Great American Interchange following formation of the Isthmus of Panama.[18] By the Late Pleistocene (Lujanian), the once great diversity of notoungulates had declined to only a few of species of toxodontids, with all other notoungulate families having become extinct.[3]
Cladogram of Toxodontidae, showing the position of Toxodon relative to other toxodontids, after Forasiepi et al., 2014:[19]
There has not been a recent taxonomic revision of the genus Toxodon, leaving the number of valid species uncertain.[20]
The species Toxodon chapalmalensis is known from the Pliocene (Montehermosan-Chapadmalalan) of Argentina,[21] while Toxodon platensis, the type species, is known from the Pleistocene. The validity of other potential species like Toxodon darwini Burmeister, 1866, and Toxodon ensenadensis Ameghino, 1887 from the Early Pleistocene of Argentina is uncertain, and the species Toxodon gezi C. Ameghino, 1917 and Toxodon aguirrei Ameghino, 1917 have been considered junior synonyms of Toxodon platensis by recent authors.[22] Some recent authors have argued that that Toxodon gracilis Gervais and Ameghino, 1880, should be recognised as a distinct species from the Pleistocene of the Pampas significantly smaller than T. platensis, with these authors suggesting that T. platensis and T. gracilis represent the only valid species of Toxodon in the Pleistocene of the Pampas region.[20] Other authors have argued that all Pleistocene Toxodon species should be considered synonymous with T. platensis.[23]
Description
The bodyform of Toxodon and other toxodontids have been compared to those of hippopotamuses and rhinoceroses.[24]Toxodon platensis is one of the largest known toxodontids and notoungulates, with an estimated body mass of approximately 1,000–1,200 kilograms (2,200–2,600 lb),[25] and a body length of around 2.7 metres (8 ft 10 in).[26]
The skull of Toxodon is proportionally large,[25] and triangular in shape when viewed from above.[27] All of the teeth in the jaws are high-crowned (hypsodont).[28] Like other toxodontids, the upper and lower first incisors (I1 and i1) are large and protrude, with the second upper incisors (I2) and lower third incisors (i3) being modified into evergrowing tusks.[29] The upper incisors display an arched shape,[30] while the lower incisors project horizontally forwards at the front of the lower jaw.[28][30] The wide front of the lower jaw with the horizontally-arranged incisors has been described as "spade-like".[30] There is a gap (diastema) between the incisors and the cheek teeth.[31] Like other derived toxodontids, Toxodon had long, ever-growing (hypselodont) cheek (premolar and molar) teeth,[32] with the name Toxodon deriving from the curved shape of the upper molars, which are bowed inwards towards the midline of the skull to fit in the upper jaw. Evergrowing cheek teeth are unknown in any living ungulates, but are present in some other mammal groups like wombats and rodents. The surface of the cheek teeth is primarily composed of dentine.[3]
The thoracic vertebrae of Toxodon have elongate neural spines, which likely anchored muscles which supported the large head.[26] The legs of Toxodon are relatively short, with their bones being robust.[33] The hindlimb is considerably longer than the forelimb, resulting in the back being elevated and the shoulder, neck and head being relatively low.[28] The ulna has a strongly backwardly projecting olecranon process similar to that of rhinos, suggesting that the front leg was held extended when standing.[26] The (distal) part of the femur closest to the foot shows a pronounced medial trochlear ridge, which likely served along with the patella (kneecap) to allow the knees to be locked when standing akin to the stay apparatus of living horses as an energy saving mechanism.[34] There are three functional digits on each foot,[33][31] which are tipped with hoof-like phalanges.[35]
Mount at Museo de La Plata, Argentina
Skull in front-on view
Skull in oblique view
Skeleton in side-on view
Skull in side-on view
Distribution
Toxodon had a widespread distribution in South America east of the Andes, ranging from northern Argentina and Bolivia to the western Amazon on the Peru-Brazil border, to Northeast Brazil.[36] Although some authors suggest that the distribution of Toxodon extended into Venezuela,[29] other authors suggest that the related Mixotoxodon (which ranged as far north as the southern United States) was the only toxodontid present in the region during the Pleistocene.[37]
Palaeobiology
Although some authors have suggested that Toxodon was semiaquatic based on the similarity of some aspects of its anatomy to hippopotamuses, this has been disputed by other authors, and analysis of oxygen isotope ratios (which differ between terrestrial and aquatic animals) suggests a terrestrial lifestyle for Toxodon.[38][6] As such, it has been suggested that Toxodon was probably more ecologically comparable to rhinoceroses.[6]
Toxodon is suggested to have been capable of moving at considerable speed.[30]Toxodon is believed to have been ecologically plastic and have had a wide niche breadth,[6] with its diet varying according to local conditions,[39] with an almost totally C3browsing diet in the Amazon rainforest, mixed feeding C3 in Bahia and the Pampas to almost completely C4 dominated grazing diet in the Chaco.[36] Within the Brazilian Intertropical Region, local climate had little impact on the diet of T. platensis.[40] Although Toxodon is thought to have inhabited open landscapes like steppe and savannah,[41][42] in some areas like the southwestern Brazilian Amazon, it is suggested to have inhabited woodland.[43][44]
Like living animals of similar size, it has been suggested that Toxodon probably only gave birth to a single offspring at a time.[45]
Tracks probably attributable to Toxodon have been reported from eastern Pernambuco in Northeast Brazil.[33]
Isotopic analysis suggests that Toxodon may have been predated upon by the large sabertooth cat Smilodon populator, the apex predator of South American ecosystems during much of the Pleistocene.[47]
Extinction
Toxodon became extinct at the end of the Late Pleistocene around 12,000 years as part of the end-Pleistocene extinction event alongside almost all other large animals in South America. Previous mid-Holocene dates are now thought to be in error.[48] These extinctions followed the first arrival of humans in the Americas, and it has been suggested human hunting may have been a casual factor in the extinctions.[3] Several sites record apparent interactions between Toxodon and humans. Remains of Toxodon from the Arroyo Seco 2 site in the Pampas are associated with unambiguously butchered megafauna, but it is unclear if the Toxodon itself was actually butchered or the remains were naturally transported to the site.[49] At the Paso Otero 5 site in the Pampas of northeast Argentina, burned bones of Toxodon alongside those of numerous other extinct megafauna species are associated with Fishtail points (a type of knapped stone spear point common across South America at the end of the Pleistocene, suggested to be used to hunt large mammals[50]). The bones of the megafauna were probably deliberately burned as fuel. No cut marks are visible on the vast majority of bones at the site (with only one bone of a llama possibly displaying any butchery marks), which may be due to the burning degrading the bones.[51] Various remains of Toxodon platensis in the collection of the Museum national d'Histoire naturelle collected from the Pampas region in the 19th century including a femur, an iliac fragment, a tibia, as well as a mandible (the latter of which has been radiocarbon dated to around 13,000 years ago), have been found to display cut marks indicative of butchery.[52]
^ abcFernicola, J. C., Vizcaino, S. F., & De Iuliis, G. (2009). The fossil mammals collected by Charles Darwin in South America during his travels on board the HMS Beagle. Revista De La Asociación Geológica Argentina, 64(1), 147-159. Retrieved from https://revista.geologica.org.ar/raga/article/view/1339
^ abcFariña RA, Vizcaíno SF& De Iuliis G. 2012 Megafauna: giant beasts of Pleistocene South America. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press. p. 264-265
^ abE. Anderson Who's who in the Pleistocene: a mammalian bestiary P.S. Martin, R.G. Klein (Eds.), Quaternary Extinctions: a Prehistoric Revolution, The University of Arizona Press, Tucson, AZ (1989), pp. 64