Choeropotamidae

Choeropotamidae, also known as aplobunodontids (Haplobunodontidae), are a family of extinct mammals, extinct herbivores, belonging to artiodactyls.[1] [2] They lived between the Eocene lower/middle and the Oligocene lower (about 48 - 30 million years ago) and their remains were found in Europe and Africa.

Choeropotamidae
Temporal range: Middle Eocene–Late Oligocene
Model of Amphirhagatherium
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Artiodactyla
Family: Choeropotamidae
Owen, 1845

Description

These animals had the classic archaic appearance of primitive artiodactyls, with an unspecialized body and relatively small size. However, since the middle Eocene, cheropotamides began to develop some characteristics that will be found, more accentuated, in the suiforms: bunodonti molars (low and wide crown) and short legs. Fossils rather complete with shapes such as Amphirhagatherium indicate that these animals still had a relatively elongated tail, slender but shorter legs than those of other archaic artiodactyls, an elongated and flexible body, and a long snout. The length of these animals should not exceed the meter, and the weight was around 5 - 10 kilograms.

Classification

Cheropotamides are mainly known in numerous European Eocene deposits, and only a few fossils of dubious identity have been found in Egypt and Turkey. Cheropotamides are clearly derived from primitive forms of artiodactyls such as Diacodexis, and yet they already show some specializations that recall the suiforms, although they are not their direct ancestors. Among the various genres belonging to this family are Haplobunodon, Masillabune, Choeropotamus, Tapirulus, Amphirhagatherium and Rhagatherium.

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References

  1. "Choeropotamidae". www.gbif.org.
  2. "Fossilworks: Choeropotamidae". fossilworks.org.


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