Template:Short description Template:Automatic taxoboxDidelphodon (from [[Didelphis|Template:Italics correction[is]]] "opossum" tooth {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} Template:Transliteration "tooth") is a genus of extinct metatherian mammal from the Late Cretaceous of North America.

DescriptionEdit

File:Didelphodon skull restoration.jpg
Restoration of the skull of Didelphodon vorax
File:Didelphodon coyi 2.jpg
Cast of the D. coyi holotype (TMP 2005.000.0004), at the Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology. Late Cretaceous, Horseshoe Canyon Formation, Michichi Creek, Alberta

Although perhaps little larger than a Virginia opossum, with a skull length of Template:Convert and a weight of Template:Convert,<ref name="wilson2016"/> the teeth have specialized bladelike cusps and carnassial notches, indicating that the animal was a predator; the jaws are short and massive and bear enormous, bulbous premolar teeth which appear to have been used for crushing.<ref name="KJCCL"/> Analyses of a near-complete skull referred to Didelphodon show that it had an unusually high bite force quotient (i.e. bite force relative to body size) among Mesozoic mammals, suggesting a durophagous diet. However, its skull lacks the vaulted forehead of hyenas and other specialized bone-eating durophagous mammals, indicating that its diet was perhaps a mixture of hard foodstuffs (e.g. snails, bones) alongside small vertebrates and carrion;<ref name="wilson2016">Template:Cite journal</ref> although omnivorous habits were suggested in the past, it appears that it was incapable of processing plant matter, rendering it more likely to be hypercarnivorous or durophagous.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Some convergence with the carnassials of other predatory mammal groups has also been noted.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

DiscoveryEdit

Three species of Didelphodon are known: D. vorax, D. padanicus, and D. coyi. The genus is known from the Hell Creek Formation of Montana and the Lance Formation of Wyoming, the Frenchman Formation of Saskatchewan, the Horseshoe Canyon Formation of Alberta, and the Scollard Formation of Alberta, where it is one of the most abundant mammals. It is found solely in late Maastrichtian deposits.<ref name="KJCCL"/><ref name="FN2006"/>

ClassificationEdit

Didelphodon is a stagodontid marsupial related to Eodelphis and Pariadens. The genus appears to descend from the Campanian Eodelphis, and in particular appears to be related to Eodelphis cutleri. Pariadens appears to be more primitive than either Eodelphis or Didelphodon, and is probably sister to their group. Didelphimorphia is an order that was named in 1872 by Gill. Previously, in 1821, Gray named the superfamily Didelphoidea to house the families Alphadontidae, Pediomyidae, Peradectidae, and Stagodontidae, which unites Didelphodon with many other genera.<ref name="KJCCL"/>

File:The Childrens Museum of Indianapolis - Didelphodon mandible.jpg
Cast of the first Didelphodon mandible (the holotype of the genus), assigned to D. vorax, to be discovered still containing teeth, now located in the permanent collection of The Children's Museum of Indianapolis

In 2006, a study found that the stagodontids only contained two taxa, Didelphodon and Eodelphis. The previously-included Pariadens was excluded from the group because its type species, P. kirklandi, lacks any of the clade's characteristics; it was reassigned to Marsupialia incertae sedis. Another species, "P." mckennai lacks marsupial features, and is probably a therian. Another historical stagodontid, Boreodon, is a nomen dubium. Finally, the purported stagodontid Delphodon is probably a synonym of Pediomys or Alphadon.<ref name="FN2006"/>

File:Didelphodon.jpg
Premolar or molar of Didelphodon. Like most mammals, and unlike their contemporaries, the dinosaurs, Didelphodon had very advanced dentition.

A 2016 phylogenetic analysis found that Didelphodon and other stagodontids were marsupialiforms. Their relationships within the Marsupialiformes are shown below.<ref name="wilson2016"/>

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PaleobiologyEdit

File:Didelphodon NT small.jpg
Life restoration of Didelphodon vorax

Although it has been argued on the basis of the shape of referred tarsal bones that Didelphodon and other stagodontids were semiaquatic due to having flexible feet, these traits may in fact be evidence of increased rigidity in the foot.<ref name="FN2006">Template:Cite journal</ref><ref name="KJCCL">Template:Cite book</ref> Nevertheless, a recently-foundTemplate:Clarify timeframe and as-of-yet undescribed specimen, located just Template:Convert away from a Triceratops in a riverbed, suggests that Didelphodon may have possessed an otter-like body with a tasmanian devil-like skull. A study that is being prepared by Kraig Derstler, Greg Wilson, Robert Bakker, Ray Vodden and Mike Triebold will describe this new specimen, housed in the Rocky Mountain Dinosaur Resource Center.<ref name="RMDRC"/> A study on Mesozoic mammal locomotion demonstrates that Didelphodon groups with semi-aquatic species.<ref>Meng Chen, Gregory Philip Wilson, A multivariate approach to infer locomotor modes in Mesozoic mammals, Article in Paleobiology 41(02) · February 2015 {{#invoke:doi|main}}</ref>

The evolution of Didelphodon and other large stagodontids (as well as large deltatheroidans like Nanocuris) occurs after the local extinction of eutriconodont mammals, suggesting passive or direct ecological replacement.<ref>G. W. Rougier, B. M. Davis, and M. J. Novacek. 2015. A deltatheroidan mammal from the Upper Cretaceous Baynshiree Formation, eastern Mongolia. Cretaceous Research 52:167-177</ref> Given that all insectivorous and carnivorous mammal groups suffered heavy losses during the mid-Cretaceous, it seems likely these metatherians simply occupied niches left after the extinction of most eutriconodonts.<ref>David M. Grossnickle, P. David Polly, Mammal disparity decreases during the Cretaceous angiosperm radiation, Published 2 October 2013.{{#invoke:doi|main}}</ref>

See alsoEdit

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ReferencesEdit

<references> <ref name="RMDRC">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> <ref name="KJCCL">Template:Cite book</ref> <ref name="FN2006">Template:Cite journal</ref> </references>

Further readingEdit

  • Template:Cite book
  • Clemens, W. A., Jr. (1979). Marsupialia. Mesozoic mammals: the first two-thirds of mammalian history. J. A. Lilligraven, Kielan-Jaworowska and W. A. Clemens, Jr. Berkeley, University of California Press: 192–220.
  • Fox, R. C., & Naylor, B. G. (1986). A new species of Didelphodon Marsh (Marsupialia) from the Upper Cretaceous of Alberta, Canada: paleobiology and phylogeny. Neues Jahrbuch für Geologie und Paläontologie, Abhandlungen, 172, 357–380.
  • BBC Online: Science & Nature: Prehistoric Life

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