ABSTRACT
We re-evaluate the tribal allocation of Olympicomys vossi, an extinct member of Sigmodontinae (Rodentia, Cricetidae). Originally described from fragmentary jaws, this taxon was considered as a Phyllotini. In light of new remains, including hemimandibles and for the first time an anterior part of the cranium with the upper dentition, we propose that it belongs to the Reithrodontini. The studied materials were collected in coastal outcrops of the Vorohué Formation (late Pliocene-early Pleistocene) south of Mar del Plata, Buenos Aires Province, Central Argentina. The reallocation of Olympicomys into Reithrodontini is based on the presence in this genus of several diagnostic characters of this tribe including a deeply excised anterior border of the zygomatic plate, a well-developed zygomatic spine, a shallow area of insertion of the anterior deep masseter muscle, a posteriorly depressed palate, labial accessory roots on upper and lower first molars, three-rooted lower third molar, and a bifid metaflexus on the second upper molar. Chukimys favaloroi and Dankomys vorohuensis, two other Pliocene Argentinean sigmodontines, are suggested as extinct reithrodontines. The restudy of Olympicomys provides elements to discuss the pattern of radiation of Sigmodontinae and to improve the chronostratigraphy of the coastal Neogene sedimentary succession of the Buenos Aires province.
Acknowledgments
The core of this contribution was developed as part of the doctoral dissertation of the first author (under the supervision of PEO and UFJP) who led his investigation in the premises of the Instituto Superior de Correlación Geológica (INSUGEO-CONICET-UNT). Fernando Scaglia (MMP) prepared the new material of O. vossi. We are grateful to the curators who provided materials used in this study (F. Scaglia, MMP; Marcelo Reguero, MLP). Comments offered by an anonymous reviewer improved the manuscript. This research was possible thanks to the economic support and the grant projects of Agencia Nacional de Promoción Científica y Tecnológica, PICT 2014-1039 (to UFJP) and of the University of Tucuman, PIUNT G626 (to PEO).
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.
Data availability statement
The data such as original photographs that support the findings of this study are available from the corresponding
author, FB, upon request.
Supplementary material
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