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Articles

Inferring differential behavior between giant ground sloth adults and juveniles through scapula morphology

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Article: e1569018 | Received 12 Mar 2018, Accepted 18 Dec 2018, Published online: 05 Apr 2019
 

ABSTRACT

Animals with large differences in body size between adults and juveniles will often exhibit differences in behavior through ontogeny, and these behavioral differences can sometimes have direct effects on skeletal morphology. Scapula shape has been shown in several groups to be highly influenced by function and in some groups to be a good indicator of body size. Megalonyx and Paramylodon, two of the most common and widespread of the North American Plio-Pleistocene giant ground sloths, had overlapping temporal and geographic ranges. However, they have few co-occurrences in the fossil record. In this study, the scapulae of juvenile and adult Megalonyx jeffersonii and Paramylodon harlani were analyzed using geometric morphometrics and compared with those of the two genera of modern tree sloths, Bradypus and Choloepus. The ground sloths have significantly different scapula shapes from each other, as do the tree sloths. The scapula shapes between juveniles and adults of each genus are also significantly different from each other, with the scapulae of the juveniles of each species more circular in appearance than the more ovoid ones in adults. All four genera show significant allometry, but it is more apparent in adults than juveniles. However, there is no difference in nonallometric shape between adults and juveniles or between each pair of genera. The ground sloths exhibit similar changes in ontogeny to those observed in modern sloths, indicating that ground sloth juveniles may have engaged in similar behaviors to those of modern sloths, such as clinging to their mothers for transportation. Ground sloth juveniles also possess morphological traits that have been linked with semiarboreal behaviors.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

I am grateful to my graduate advisor, A. F. Budd, and my dissertation committee, D. C. Adams, C. A. Brochu, R. G. Franciscus, H. G. McDonald, and H. J. Sims, for their advice and help with this project. H. Semken provided extensive advice and support, and I would not have been able to conduct this study without him. The manuscript was greatly improved thanks to the comments and suggestions of two reviewers. This project would not have been possible without the donation of specimens of Megalonyx jeffersonii by B. and S. Athen and D. and L. Tiemann to the University of Iowa and their commitment that these specimens be used for research and education. I am also grateful to the following individuals for their assistance in accessing specimens for this study: T. Adrain (SUI), M. Andersen (ZMUC), S. Bargo (MLP), P. Brewer (NHMUK), C. Conroy (UCMVZ), J. Ebersole (McWane Science Center), A. Farrell (LACMHC), J. C. Fernicola (MACN), J. Galkin (AMNH), P. Holroyd (UCMP), S. Horgen (SUI), R. Hulbert (FLMNH), L. Ivy (DMNS), C. Mehling (AMNH), D. Perea (FCDPV), M. Reguero (MLP), A. Rinderknecht (MNHN Uruguay), W. Simpson (FMNH), R. Stucky (DMNS), M. Thompson (IMNH), N. Toledo (MLP), and S. Vizcaino (MLP). Funding was provided by the University of Iowa Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences Max and Lorraine Littlefield Fund and the University of Iowa Graduate College T. Anne Cleary International Dissertation Research Fellowship.

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