853
Views
0
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Articles

A new glirid-like cricetid from the lower Oligocene of Southern China

, ORCID Icon & ORCID Icon
Article: e1917587 | Received 06 May 2020, Accepted 11 Feb 2021, Published online: 15 Jun 2021

LITERATURE CITED

  • Anderson, P. S., P. G. Gill, and E. J. Rayfield. 2011. Modeling the effects of cingula structure on strain patterns and potential fracture in tooth enamel. Journal of Morphology 272:50–65.
  • Blanga-Kanfi, S., H. Miranda, O. Penn, T. Pupko, R. W. DeBry, and D. Huchon. 2009. Rodent phylogeny revised: analysis of six nuclear genes from all major rodent clades. BMC Evolutionary Biology 9:71.
  • Bowdich, T. E. 1821. An Analysis of the Natural Classifications of Mammalia, for the Use of Students and Travellers. J. Smith, Paris, 115 pp.
  • Churakov, G., M. K. Sadasivuni, K. R. Rosenbloom, D. Huchon, J. Brosius, and J. Schmitz. 2010. Rodent evolution: back to the root. Molecular Biology and Evolution 27:1315–1326.
  • Collinson, M. E. 1992. Vegetational and floristic changes around the Eocene/Oligocene boundary in western and central Europe. Princeton University Press, 430 pp.
  • Collinson, M. E., and J. J. Hooker. 1987. Vegetational and mammalian faunal changes in the Early Tertiary of southern England. In International Congress of Systematics and Evolutionary Biology 3:259–304.
  • Daxner-Höck, G. 2000. Ulaancricetodon badamae n. gen., n. sp. (Mammalia, Rodentia, Cricetidae) from the Valley of Lakes in Central Mongolia. Paläontologische Zeitschrift 74:215–225.
  • De Bruijn, H., and W. von Koenigswald. 1994. Early Miocene rodent faunas from eastern Mediterranean area. Part V. The genus Enginia (Muroidea) with a discussion of the structure of the incisor enamel. Proceedings van de Koninklijke Nederlandse Akademie van Wetenschappen 97:381–405.
  • De Bruijn, H., E. Ünay, G. Saraç and G. Klein Hofmeijer. 1987. An unusual new eucricetodontine from the Lower Miocene of the Eastern Mediterranean. Proceedings of the Koninklijke Nederlandse Akademie van Wetenschappen 90:119–132.
  • De Bruijn, H., E. Ünay, L. W. van den Hoek Ostende, and G. Saraç. 1992. A new association of small mammals from the lowermost Lower Miocene of Central Anatolia. Geobios 25:651–670.
  • Dollman, G. 1910. Two new African mammals. Annals and Magazine of Natural History 8:266–230.
  • Famoso, N. A., R. S. Feranec, and E. B. Davis. 2013. Occlusal enamel complexity and its implications for lophodonty, hypsodony, body mass, and diet in extinct and extant ungulates. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 387:211–216.
  • Fischer von Waldheim, J. G. 1817. Adversaria zoologica. Mémoires de la Société Impériale des Naturalistes de Moscou 5:357–471.
  • Flynn, L. J., Jacobs, L. L., Kimura, Y. and E. H. Lindsay. 2019. Rodent Suborders. Fossil Imprint 75:292–298.
  • Fortelius, M., and N. Solounias. 2000. Functional characterization of ungulate molars using the abrasion-attrition wear gradient: a new method for reconstructing paleodiets. American Museum Novitates 3301:1–36.
  • Freudenthal, M. 2004. Gliridae (Rodentia, Mammalia) from the Eocene and Oligocene of the Sierra Palomera (Teruel, Spain). Treballs del Museu de Geología de Barcelona 12:97–173.
  • Gomes Rodrigues, H., Marivaux, L., and M. Vianey-Liaud. 2010. Phylogeny and systematic revision of Eocene Cricetidae (Rodentia, Mammalia) from Central and East Asia: on the origin of cricetid rodents. Journal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary Research 48:259–268.
  • Hillson S. 2005. Teeth. 2nd edition. Cambridge, United Kingdom, Cambridge University Press, 173 pp.
  • Kermack, D. M., K. A. Kermack, and F. Mussett. 1968. The Welsh pantothere Kuehneotherium praecursoris. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 47:407–423.
  • Kovalevsky, W. 1873. On the osteology of the hypopotamidae, by Dr. Kowalevsky, communicated by Professor Huxley. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London 163:19–94.
  • Li, L.-Z., X.-N. Ni, X.-Y. Lu, and Q. Li. 2016. First record of Cricetops rodent in the Oligocene of southwestern China. Historical Biology 29:488–494.
  • Li, Q. and X.-J. Ni. 2016. An early Oligocene fossil demonstrates treeshrews are slowly evolving “living fossils”. Scientific reports 6:18627.
  • Maridet, O., and X.-J. Ni. 2013. A new cricetid rodent from the early Oligocene of Yunnan, China, and its evolutionary implications for early Eurasian cricetids. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 33:185–194.
  • Maridet, O., W.-Y. Wu, J. Ye, X.-J. Ni, and J. Meng. 2011. New discoveries of glirids and eomyids (Mammalia, Rodentia) in the Early Miocene of the Junggar basin (Northern Xinjiang province, China). Swiss Journal of Palaeontology 130:315–323.
  • Matthew, W. D. 1926. The evolution of the horse: a record and its interpretation. Quarterly Review of Biology 1:139–185.
  • Mein, P., and M. Freudenthal. 1971. Une nouvelle classification des Cricetidae (Rodentia, Mammalia) du Tertiaire d’Europe. Scripta Geologica 2:1–37.
  • Meng, J., and M. C. McKenna. 1998. Faunal turnovers of Palaeogene mammals from the Mongolian Plateau. Nature 394:364–367.
  • Ni, X.-J., Q. Li, L.-Z. Li, and K. C. Beard. 2016. Oligocene primates from China reveal divergence between African and Asian primate evolution. Science 352:673–677.
  • Novak, R. 1999. Walker's Mammals of the World, Sixth Edition. Baltimore and London: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 2015 pp.
  • Ognev, S. I. 1924. Nature and sport in Ukraine, Kharkov. 1 pp.
  • Osborn, H. F. 1910. The age of mammals in Europe, Asia and North America. Macmillan, New York. 670 pp.
  • Prothero, D. R. 1994. The late Eocene-Oligocene extinctions. Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences 22:145–165.
  • Ramstein, G., F. Fluteau, J. Besse, and S. Joussaume. 1997. Effect of orogeny, plate motion and land-sea distribution on Eurasian climate change over the past 30 million years. Nature 386:788–795.
  • Ronquist, F., M. Teslenko, P. van der Mark, D. L. Ayres, A. Darling, S. Höhna, B. Larget, L. Liu, M.A. Suchard, and J. P. Huelsenbeck. 2012. MRBAYES 3.2: Efficient Bayesian phylogenetic inference and model selection across a large model space. Systematic Biology 61:539–542.
  • Schaub, S. 1925. Die hamsterartigen Nagetiere des Tertiärs und ihre lebenden Verwandten. Abhandlungen der Schweizerischen Paläontologischen Gesellschaft 45:1–114.
  • Shevyreva, N. S. 1967. Cricetodon from middle Oligocene of central Kazakhstan. Paleontologicheskia Zhurnal 1967: 90–98. [in Russian]
  • Smuts, J. J. L. 1832. Dissertatio zoologica, enumerationem mammalium capensium. Cyfveer, 105 pp.
  • Sun, J.-M., X.-J. Ni, S.-D. Bi, W.-Y. Wu, J. Ye, J. Meng, and B. F. Windley. 2014. Synchronous turnover of flora, fauna, and climate at the Eocene–Oligocene Boundary in Asia. Scientific Reports 4:7463.
  • Swofford, D. L. 1998. PAUP*: Phylogenetic Analysis Using Parsimony (*and Other Methods), Version 4. Sinauer Associates, Sunderland, Massachusetts.
  • Thaler, L. 1966. Les Rongeurs fossiles du Bas-Languedoc dans leurs rapports avec l'Histoire des faunes et la Stratigraphie du Tertiaire d'Europe. Mem Mus Nat Hist Nat Paris C: 1–295.
  • Thomas, O. 1897. On the genera of rodents: an attempt to bring up to date the current arrangement of the order. Proceedings of the Zoological Society London X:50–76.
  • Tong, Y.-S. 1997. Middle Eocene small mammals from Liguanqiao basin of Henan province and Yuanqu basin of Shanxi province, central China. Paleontologica Sinica, New Series C 18:1–256.
  • Ünay, E. 1989. Rodents from the Middle Oligocene of Turkish Thrace. Utrecht Micropaleontological Bulletin, Special Publication 5:1–119.
  • Vaughan, T. A., J. M. Ryan, and N. J. Czaplewski. 2000. Mammalogy, 4th edition. Thomson Learning, New York, 565 pp.
  • Vianey-Liaud, M. 1994. La radiation des Gliridae (Rodentia) à l’Eocène supérieur en Europe Occidentale et sa descendance Oligocène. Münchner Geowissenschaftliche Abhandlungen A: 117–160.
  • Wagner, J. A. 1840. Beschreibung einiger neuer Nager. Abhandlungen der Bayerischen Akademie der Wissenschaften - Mathematisch-naturwissenschaftliche Klasse 3:173–218.
  • Wang, B.-Y., and M. R. Dawson. 1994. A primitive cricetid (Mammalia: Rodentia) from the middle Eocene of Jiangsu province, China. Annals of the Carnegie Museum 63:239–256.
  • Wu, W.-Y., J. Meng, J. Ye, X.-J. Ni, and S.-D. Bi. 2016. Restudy of the Late Oligocene dormice from northern Junggar Basin. Vertebrata PalAsiatica 54:36–50.