Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Desmostylus

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Kingdom
  
Order
  
Scientific name
  
Desmostylus

Rank
  
Genus

Phylum
  
Chordata

Family
  
Higher classification
  
Desmostylus Desmostylushesperus738x591jpg

Similar
  
Desmostylia, Paleoparadoxia, Mammal, Ashoroa, Behemotops

Desmostylus is an extinct genus of herbivorous mammal of the family Desmostylidae living from the Chattian stage of the Late Oligocene subepoch through the Late Miocene subepoch (28.4 mya—7.250 Mya) and in existenced for approximately 21.2 million years.

Contents

Desmostylus Desmostylus Tusk and Tooth Fossils

Morphology

Desmostylus Desmostylus mamfero herbvoro del Oligoceno de Amrica y Asia

Desmostylus was a large, hippopotamus-like creature of about 1.8 metres (6 ft) long which weighed about 200 kilograms (440 lb). It had a short tail and powerful legs with four hooves. Both the creature's jaws were elongated and sported forward-facing tusks, which were elongated canines and incisors.

Desmostylus Desmostylus hesperus Wikipedia

Most likely fully aquatic, Desmostylus is thought to have lived in shallow water in coastal regions, usually less than 30 meters deep. Recent isotope work indicates that Desmostylus more likely lived (or spent a large amount of time) in freshwater or estuary ecosystems foraging for aquatic freshwater plants.

Species

Desmostylus desmostylus DeviantArt

D. hesperus (synonyms and invalid names: D. watasei, D. cymatias, D. californicus, D. mirabilis, D. minor, Desmostylella typica), D. coalingensis (syn. Vanderhoofius coalingensis), and D. japonicus.

Desmostylus httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Marsh 1888 named the type specimen D. hesperus based on a set of isolated teeth that he had found near Mission San Jose, California (type locality: 37.6°N 121.9°W / 37.6; -121.9, paleocoordinates 36.8°N 117.6°W / 36.8; -117.6). Marsh described his specimen as a sirenian and proposed affinities with Metaxytherium (a genus of extinct dugongs) and Halicore (an obsolete name for dugong).

Desmostylus Desmostylus Wikipedia

Several other species were later described based on minor differences in tooth morphology. Most or all of these species have been synonymized with D. hesperus since variation in tooth morphology between individuals assigned to one of these species has proven to be to greater than the differences between species.

D. japonicus was described by Yoshiwara & Iwasakai 1902 based on a well-preserved partial skull and named by Tokunaga & Iwasaki 1914. It has been reproposed as distinct species based on cranial morphology.

Fossil distribution

Fossils have been discovered from along the northern Pacific Rim from Baja California Peninsula northward along the coast of California, Oregon, Washington and west to Sakhalin Island, Hokkaido, Japan, and south to the Shimane Prefecture, Japan.

References

Desmostylus Wikipedia


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