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A new species of Gomphotherium (Proboscidea, Mammalia) from China and the evolution of Gomphotherium in Eurasia

Article: e1318284
Received 05 Dec 2016
Accepted 30 Jan 2017
Published online: 13 Jun 2017
 
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Gomphotherium is a stem taxon of Elephantida that was widespread in Africa, Eurasia, and North America during the Miocene. However, the evolution of this genus is greatly debated because of morphological variation among the species of Gomphotherium. In the present work, we describe a cranium and accompanying material of Gomphotherium from the late middle Miocene Hujialiang Formation of Linxia Basin, China. The new material shows dental similarities to G. subtapiroideum from the middle Miocene of Europe; however, it displays some cranial, mandibular, and dental feature combinations that are distinct from the known species of Gomphotherium. Therefore, a new species, G. tassyi, is established. We further study the phylogeny of Gomphotherium by cladistic analysis and recognize four groups. The most basal ‘G. annectens group’ is a paraphyletic group that includes G. annectens, G. cooperi, G. sylvaticum, and G. hannibali. The African taxa, G. libycum and G. pygmaeus, constitute a monophyletic group that has not been named. The ‘G. angustidens group’ is a monophyletic group that includes G. inopinatum, G. mongoliense, G. connexum, and G. angustidens. In addition, the ‘derived Gomphotherium group,’ which includes G. subtapiroideum, G. tassyi, G. wimani, G. browni, G. productum, and G. steinheimense, was widely distributed in Eurasia and North America during the middle and late Miocene.

http://zoobank.org/urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:28B89A74-7FF6-41DB-BA3C-C4CDD200A30F

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Citation for this article: Wang, S.-Q., Y. Li, J. Duangkrayom, X.-W. Yang, W. He, and S.-Q. Chen. 2017. A new species of Gomphotherium (Proboscidea, Mammalia) from China and the evolution of Gomphotherium in Eurasia. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. DOI: 10.1080/02724634.2017.1318284.

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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We thank P. Tassy (MNHN, France) who read the initial manuscript and provided much advice to improve the manuscript. We thank G. Konidaris (Greece) and W. Sanders (U.S.A.) for their great suggestions in their review of this paper. We thank T. Deng, Z.-X. Qiu, S.-K. Hou, Q.-Q. Shi, and B.-Y. Sun (IVPP, China); U. Göhlich (NMHW, Austria); and J. Meng (AMNH, U.S.A.) for discussions and advice on this work. This work was supported by the National Basic Research Program of China (grant no. 2012CB821900), the Chinese Academy of Sciences (grant no. XDB03020104), the National Natural Science Foundation of China (grant nos. 41372001, 41430102), and the Special Research Program of Basic Science and Technology of the Ministry of Science and Technology (grant no. 2015FY310100-14).

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