Tomarctus

Extinct genus of carnivores From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Tomarctus

Tomarctus is a canid genus of the extinct subfamily Borophaginae which inhabited most of North America during the late Early Miocene to the Early Barstovian age of the Middle Miocene (23—16 million years ago). Tomarctus existed for approximately 6.83 million years.[citation needed]

Quick Facts Scientific classification, Type species ...
Tomarctus
Temporal range: early to middle Miocene 20.43–13.6 Ma
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T. brevirostris (=T. temerarius), collected from Nebraska. At the AMNH.
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Carnivora
Family: Canidae
Subfamily: Borophaginae
Tribe: Borophagini
Subtribe: Aelurodontina
Genus: Tomarctus
Cope, 1873
Type species
Tomarctus brevirostris
Species[1]
  • T. brevirostris
  • T. hippophaga
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Range of Tomarctus based on fossil distribution
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This animal shared a period and ecology with a variety of bear dogs, giant mustelid genera, and the genus of bone-crushing Canidae, Cynarctoides. As the bear dogs and giant mustelids became extinct, Tomarctus were a hyena-like fruit-eating canidae.[citation needed]


Species

The genus currently contains two accepted species, Tomarctus brevirostris and Tomarctus hippophaga.

Tomarctus brevirostris, synonymous with Aelurodon francisi, was named by Edward Drinker Cope in 1873. Fossil specimens have been found as far south as Panama, east to Plum Point, Maryland, west to California, and north to Montana.[2]

Tomarctus hippophaga was first described by Matthew and Cook in 1909 from the Trojan Quarry, Olcott Formation, Nebraska. Specimens have since been found as far west as California and as far north as the Montana/Alberta, Canada line.[3]

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Tomarctus brevirostris reconstruction.

References

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