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Megatherium
Fossil range: 2–0.008 Ma
Late Pliocene to Early Holocene
Skeleton of Megatherium americanum in the Natural History Museum, London
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Superorder: Xenarthra
Order: Pilosa
Family: Megatheriidae
Genus: Megatherium
Cuvier, 1796
Type species
Megatherium americanum Cuvier, G., 1796
Species
  • M. altiplanicum Saint-André & de Iuliis, 2001
  • M. tarijense Gervais & Ameghino, 1880
  • M. medinae Philippi, 1893
  • M. istilarti Kraglievich, 1925
  • M. parodii Hoffstetter, 1949
  • M. sundti Philippi, 1893
  • M. gallardoi Ameghino & Kraglievich, 1921

Megatherium ("Great Beast") was a genus of elephant-sized ground sloths endemic to Central America and South America that lived from the Pliocene through Pleistocene existing approximately 5.289 million years.[1]

The rhinoceros-sized Promegatherium is suggested to be the ancestor of Megatherium.

Contents

Characteristics

Illustration of Megatherium

Unlike its living relatives, the tree sloths, Megatherium was one of the largest mammals to walk the Earth, weighing five tons, about as much as an African bull elephant. Although it was primarily a quadruped, its footprints show that it was capable of assuming a bipedal stance. When it stood on its hind legs, it was about twice the height of an elephant, or about twenty feet tall. This sloth, like a modern anteater, walked on the sides of its feet because its claws prevented it from putting them flat on the ground. Megatherium species were members of the abundant Pleistocene megafauna, large mammals that lived during the Pleistocene epoch.

Megatherium had a robust skeleton with a large pelvic girdle and a broad muscular tail. Its large size enabled it to feed at heights unreachable by other contemporary herbivores. Rising on its powerful hind legs and using its tail to form a tripod, Megatherium could support its massive body weight while using the curved claws on its long forelegs to pull down branches with the choicest leaves. Its jaw is believed to have housed a long tongue, which it would then use to pull leaves into its mouth, similar to the modern tree sloth.

Some recent morpho-functional analysis[2] indicates that M. americanum was adapted for strong vertical biting. The teeth are hypsodont and bilophodont, and the sagittal section of each loph is triangular with a sharp edge. This suggests the teeth were used for cutting, rather than grinding, and that hard fibrous food was not the primary dietary component.

Megatherium americanum skeleton, Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle, Paris

There is a common misbelief that the sabre-toothed cat Smilodon hunted Megatherium, but healthy adult sloths were far too large for Smilodon to attack. Richard Fariña and Ernesto Blanco of the Universidad de la República in Montevideo have analysed a fossil skeleton of M. americanum and discovered that its olecranon - the part of the elbow to which the triceps muscle attaches - was very short. This adaptation is found in carnivores and optimises speed rather than strength. The researchers say this would have enabled M. americanum to use its claws like daggers.[3] The conclusion is that due to its nutrient-poor habitats, Megatherium may have taken over the kills of Smilodon. A number of adult Glyptodon fossils exist in which the creatures died on their backs. This hints at Megatherium scavenging or hunting this animal, as no other known animal existed in South America during that period that could flip an adult Glyptodon.

Habitat

They inhabited woodlands and grasslands.

Distribution

Megatherium was endemic to South America.[4] The most modern descendants of Megatherium were extant in parts of South America until at least as recently as circa 10,000 years ago. An example of these most recent finds is at Cueva del Milodon in Patagonian Chile.[5]

Habits

Hips, hind legs, and tail of Megatherium americanum

This giant ground sloth was herbivorous and, although it could stand on its hind legs, using its tail as a balancing tripod to reach for vegetation, it fed chiefly on terrestrial plants.

While it is generally believed to have been mostly, if not exclusively, vegetarian, it has been suggested that it may have used its size and strength to take over the kills of Smilodon and to scavenge or hunt Glyptodon.

It is thought that the giant sloth lived in groups, but it may have lived singly in caves. It is also believed that it lived in woodland and grassland environments.

Diet and feeding habits

Megatherium americanum skeleton seen from below

The giant ground sloth lived in the lightly wooded areas of South America, feeding on the leaves such as yuccas, agaves, and grasses. The closely related genus Eremotherium lived in more tropical environments further north, and in North America. Pulling itself upright to sit on its haunches or to stand, the giant ground sloth balanced its weight with its tail. It then tugged at plants with its feet, digging them up with the five sharp claws on each foot. The sloth used its simple teeth to grind down food before swallowing it, and its highly developed cheek muscles helped in this process. The sloth's stomach was able to digest coarse and fibrous food. For millions of years, the sloth had no enemies to bother it, so it was probably a diurnal feeder. It is likely that it spent a lot of time resting to aid digestion.

It has been suggested that the giant sloth may have been a carnivore, although this is a controversial claim.[6]. It is depicted as both a herbivore and a scavenger in the BBC documentary Walking with Beasts. It is depicted as an omnivore in the Animal Planet special Giant Monsters. In another BBC documentary, Prehistoric America, the Megatherium is depicted as a herbivore.

Evolution

The ground sloths, as with all other xenarthrans, evolved in isolation in South America, while it was an island during the Paleogene. During the Pliocene, the Central American Isthmus formed, causing the Great American Interchange, and a mass extinction of much of the indigenous South American megafauna. Ground sloths were largely unaffected and continued to thrive in spite of competition from the northern immigrants. In fact, ground sloths were among the various South American animal groups to migrate northwards, into North America, where they remained and flourished until the late Pleistocene. In the south, the giant ground sloth flourished until about 10,000 years ago. Most cite the appearance of an expanding population of human hunters as the cause of its extinction.

The oldest (and smallest) species of Megatherium is M. altiplanicum of Pliocene Bolivia.[7] It was very similar to the Miocene ground sloth, Promegatherium, and was about the size of a rhinoceros. Species of Megatherium became larger and larger, with the largest species, M. americanum of the late Pleistocene, reaching the size of an African Elephant.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ A. E. Zurita, A. A. Carlini, G. J. Scillato-Yané and E. P. Tonni. 2004. Mamíferos extintos del Cuaternario de la Provincia del Chaco (Argentina) y su relación con aquéllos del este de la región pampeana y de Chile. Revista geológica de Chile 31(1):65-87
  2. ^ M.S. Bargo (2001)
  3. ^ Fariña and Blanco (1996)
  4. ^ M.C. McKenna (1997)
  5. ^ C. Michael Hogan (2008) Cueva del Milodon, Megalithic Portal [1]
  6. ^ http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1511/is_n6_v18/ai_19447777
  7. ^ Saint-André & De Iuliis (2001)

References

  • Bargo, M.S. (2001) The ground sloth Megatherium americanum: Skull shape, bite forces, and diet. Acta Palaeontologica Polonica, 46(2): 173–192.
  • Fariña, R. A.; R. E. Blanco (1996). "Megatherium, the stabber". Proceedings of the Royal Society of London 263: 1725–1729. doi:10.1098/rspb.1996.0252. http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0962-8452(19961222)263%3A1377%3C1725%3AMTS%3E2.0.CO%3B2-5. 
  • McKenna, M. C, and S. K. Bell. 1997. Classification of Mammals Above the Species Level. Columbia University Press, New York, 631 pp.
  • Saint-André, P-A. and De Iuliis, G. (2001) The smallest and most ancient representative of the genus Megatherium Cuvier, 1796 (Xenarthra, Tardigrada, Megatheriidae), from the Pliocene of the Bolivian Altiplano. Geodiversitas, 23(4): 625-645.

External links


1911 encyclopedia

Up to date as of January 14, 2010

From LoveToKnow 1911

MEGATHERIUM (properly Megalotherium), a huge extinct edentate mammal from the Pleistocene deposits of Buenos Aires, typifying the family Megatheriidae (or Megalotheriidae), and by far the largest representative of the Edentata. Except, indeed, for its relatively shorter limbs Megatherium americanum rivalled an elephant in bulk, the total length of the skeleton being 18 feet, five of which are taken up by the tail. The Megatheriidae, which include a number of genera, are collectively Megatherium, from the specimen in the Museum of the Royal College of Surgeons of England. (X 215-.) known as ground-sloths, and occupy a position intermediate between the sloths and the ant-eater: their skulls being of the type of the former, while their limbs and vertebrae conform in structure to those of the latter. As in the other typical South American edentates, there are no teeth in the front of the jaws, while those of the cheek-series usually comprise five pairs in the upper and four in the lower. In nearly all the other Pleistocene forms these teeth were subcylindrical in shape, with the summit of the crown (except sometimes in the first pair) forming a cup-like depression; enamel being in all cases absent. From all these Megatherium differs in the form and structure of the teeth.

In form, as shown in fig. 2, the teeth are quadrangular prisms, each of which is surmounted by a pair of transverse ridges. They grew apparently throughout life, and were implanted to a great depth in the jaws, being 7 or 8 in. in length, with a cross-section of at least an inch and a half. The ridges on the crown are due to the arrangement of the vertical layers of hard dentine (fig. 3, d), softer vasodentine (v) and cement (c). The skull is relatively small, with the lower jaw very deep in its central portion, and produced in part into a long snout-like symphysis for the reception, doubtless, of a large and fleshy tongue (fig. 2). Unlike sloths, the megatherium has seven cervical vertebrae; and the spines of all the trunk-vertebrae incline backwards. The pelvis and hind-limbs are much more powerful than the fore-quarters; thereby enabling these animals, in all ' probability, to rear themselves on their hind-quarters, and thus pull down the branches of trees: if not, indeed, in some cases to bodily uproot the trees themselves. Large chevron-bones are suspended to the vertebrae of the tail, which was massive, and probably afforded a support when the monster was sitting up. The humerus has no foramen, and the FIG. 1. - Skeleton of the (From Owen.) FIG. 2. - Lower Jaw and Teeth of Megatherium. whole fore-limb was very mobile. The first front toe was rudimentary, having no phalanges, but the fifth was rather less aborted, although clawless; the other three carried enormous claws, protected by reflected sheaths. The hind-foot is remarkable for the great backward projection of the calcaneum, and likewise for the peculiar shape of the astragalus; the middle toe alone carries a claw, this being of huge size, and ensheathed like those of the fore foot. No trace .3 (From Owen.) FIG. 3. - Section of Upper Molar Teeth of Megatherium. (X a.) of a bony armour in the skin has been detected; but, from the evidence of other genera, it may be assumed that the body was clothed in a coat of long, coarse hair. Although similar teeth occur in the phosphorite beds of South Carolina, which may have been transported from elsewhere, no undoubted remains of Megatherium are known from North America.

1'°1,The typical species ranged from Argentina and Chili to Brazil. For certain small ground-sloths from Patagonia with Megatherium- like teeth, see MYLODON. (R. L.*)


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Wikispecies

Up to date as of January 23, 2010

From Wikispecies

Taxonavigation

Main Page
Cladus: Eukaryota
Supergroup: Unikonta
Cladus: Opisthokonta
Regnum: Animalia
Subregnum: Eumetazoa
Cladus: Bilateria
Cladus: Nephrozoa
Cladus: Deuterostomia
Phylum: Chordata
Subphylum: Vertebrata
Infraphylum: Gnathostomata
Superclassis: Tetrapoda
Classis: Mammalia
Subclassis: Theria
Infraclassis: Placentalia
Superordo: Xenarthra
Ordo: Pilosa
Subordo: Folivora
Familia: †Megatheriidae
Subfamilia: Megatheriinae
Tribus: Megatheriini
Subtribus: Megatheriina
Genus: Megatherium
Species: M. americanum - M. altiplanicum - M. gallardoi - M. istilarti - M. medinae - M. parodii - M. sundti - M. tarijense

Name

Megatherium Cuvier, 1796


Simple English

Megatherium
Fossil range: Late Pliocene to Early Holocene
File:Megatherium americanum Skeleton
Skeleton of Megatherium americanum in the Natural History Museum, London
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Superorder: Xenarthra
Order: Pilosa
Family: †Megatheriidae
Genus: Megatherium
Cuvier, 1796
Type species
Megatherium americanum Cuvier, G., 1796
Species
  • M. altiplanicum Saint-André & de Iuliis, 2001
  • M. tarijense Gervais & Ameghino, 1880
  • M. medinae Philippi, 1893
  • M. istilarti Kraglievich, 1925
  • M. parodii Hoffstetter, 1949
  • M. sundti Philippi, 1893
  • M. gallardoi Ameghino & Kraglievich, 1921

Megatherium was a huge, bulky, slow-moving mammal that lived during the Pleistocene epoch in South America. It went extinct about 11,000 years ago. This ice-age mammal was the largest of the ground sloths; Megatherium's name means "great beast." Megatherium was named by paleontologist Richard Owen in 1856; the first Megatherium fossil was found in Brazil in 1789.








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