New partial skeletons of Palaeocene Nyctitheriidae and evaluation of proposed euarchontan affinities.

Biol Lett

Department of Anthropology, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06520, USA Division of Vertebrate Paleontology, Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History, New Haven, CT 06520, USA.

Published: January 2015

Small-bodied, insectivorous Nyctitheriidae are known in the Palaeogene fossil record almost exclusively from teeth and fragmentary jaws and have been referred to Eulipotyphla (shrews, moles and hedgehogs) based on dental similarities. By contrast, isolated postcrania attributed to the group suggest arboreality and a relationship to Euarchonta (primates, treeshrews and colugos). Cretaceous-Palaeocene adapisoriculid insectivores have also been proposed as early euarchontans based on postcranial similarities. We describe the first known dentally associated nyctitheriid auditory regions and postcrania, and use them to test the proposed relationship to Euarchonta with cladistic analyses of 415 dental, cranial and postcranial characteristics scored for 92 fossil and extant mammalian taxa. Although nyctitheriid postcrania share similarities with euarchontans likely related to arboreality, results of cladistic analyses suggest that nyctitheriids are closely related to Eulipotyphla. Adapisoriculidae is found to be outside of crown Placentalia. These results suggest that similarities in postcranial morphology among nyctitheriids, adapisoriculids and euarchontans represent separate instances of convergence or primitive retention of climbing capabilities.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4321154PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsbl.2014.0911DOI Listing

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