11:30 AM - 11:45 AM
[BPT07-10] The extinct pinniped Allodesmus (Mammalia: Carnivora) from the Miocene of Hokkaido, northern Japan, and its implications for phylogeny and postcranial morphology
Keywords:pinnipeds, Allodesmus, phylogeny, postcranium
In this study, we described a specimen of Allodesmus (AMP25) collected in 1991 from the Middle Miocene Okoppezawa Formation, Hokkaido, northern Japan. AMP25 contains 83 bones consisting of a skull, fore- and hind-limbs, ribs and vertebrae. To demonstrate the paleobiological importance of this specimen, we performed cladistic analysis to locate the new specimen in the phylogenetic framework. We used PAUP 4.0 and Mesqueite 3.03, and then, we based on 97 morphological characters and 15 species, with the enigmatic musteloid Potamotherium, and the basal pinnipeds Enaliarctos and Pteronarctos as out-group.
As a result, previously recognized “Long head” subgroup was supported as a monophyletic group, but the “Broad head” subgroup was not recognized as a monophyletic group in our analysis. As for AMP25, it didn’t have any synapomorphy of the “Long head” subgroup and nested with Allodesmus packardi and A. naorai as unresolved polytomy. On the other hand, AMP25 has an autoapomorphy in that the supraorbital process is located at the anterior portion of the interorbital bar in our analysis. From the above and additional observations, we have concluded that AMP25 belongs to an unknown species. Importantly, some postcranial bones of AMP25 also show very different character combination, differentiating it from A. kernensis among the Desmatophocidae. In particular, morphology of the calcaneum (that is one of the component of the ankle bones) of AMP25 is remarkably distinguishable from that of A. kernensis. For example, the calcaneum of AMP25 is more slender than that of A. kernensis, and its peroneal tubercle is more developed than that of A. kernensis. These characters were distinguishable not only among the species of Allodesmus but among all other pinnipeds. It means that some postcranial characters other than characters that we used for the phylogenetic analysis in this study also have potential phylogenetic values as well as its functional importance.