fbpx
Wikipedia

Malagasy hippopotamus

Several species of Malagasy hippopotamus (also known as Malagasy pygmy hippopotamus or Madagascan pygmy hippopotamus) lived on the island of Madagascar but are now believed to be extinct. The animals were very similar to the extant hippopotamus and pygmy hippopotamus. The fossil record suggests that at least one species of hippopotamus lived until about 1,000 years ago[3] and other evidence suggests that the species may have survived until much more recently.[4] The taxonomy of these animals is not resolved and not widely studied.[5][6]

Malagasy hippopotamus
Hippopotamus lemerlei skeleton at the Museum für Naturkunde, Berlin
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Family:
Genus:
Species

Discovery and taxonomy Edit

 
Choeropsis madagascariensis skeleton with a H. amphibius skull

The Malagasy hippopotamus was first described in the mid-19th century by Alfred Grandidier, who unearthed nearly 50 individual hippos from a dried-up swamp at 'Ambolisatra'[1] (thought to be Ambolisaka, near Lake Ihotry[7]), a few miles from the Mozambique Channel. As many as four different species of hippopotamus were subsequently identified by various researchers. In a careful revision of the fossil record of the Malagasy hippos, Solweig Stuenes concluded that there were only two species of hippopotamus which she classified as Hippopotamus lemerlei and Hippopotamus madagascariensis.[1][8] In 1990, Faure and Guerin discovered a distinct third species of hippo, which they named Hippopotamus laloumena. In a review of Stuenes work, Harris suggested that Hip. madagascariensis had much in common with the extant pygmy hippopotamus of West Africa.[9] Since the extant pygmy hippopotamus was placed in the genus Hexaprotodon, he used the name Hex. madagascariensis. Some taxonomists, however, consider the modern pygmy hippo to belong to the genus Choeropsis, so this species may also be classified as C. madagascariensis.[10]

The fossil record of the Malagasy hippopotamus is extensive. At least seven hippopotamus bones show unequivocal signs of butchery, suggesting that they survived until humans arrived on Madagascar. The evidence of humans butchering the hippos also suggests their extinction may have been due to humans. Despite the discovery of many fossils, the hippos of Madagascar are not very well studied, perhaps because researchers are interested in some of the more exotic megafauna of Madagascar, such as the giant lemurs and the elephant birds.[8]

Species Edit

Although not well-studied, there is growing acceptance of three species of Malagasy hippopotamus.[10][3][11] It is not known when or exactly how these hippos arrived on the island of Madagascar. As hippos are semi-aquatic, it is possible that they survived the 400 km (248 mi) trek across the channel, although presumably when the water was shallower and there were perhaps small islands along the way. It is possible that the three species of hippopotamus represent three distinct and successful migrations to the island.[11] Hippos are the only endemic ungulates ever to have lived on Madagascar.

Hippopotamus lemerlei Edit

 
Hippopotamus lemerlei skull

Hippopotamus lemerlei bones have been mostly discovered in the rivers and lakes of western Madagascar, suggesting a riparian lifestyle, very similar to that of the modern hippopotamus of modern Africa. H. lemerlei also shared the high orbits that make it easier for the hippopotamus to see while in the water.[8] The skull of H. lemerlei also resembled that of the modern hippopotamus, but with consistent size differences, indicating that H. lemerlei was a sexually dimorphic species.

Although a clear relative to the common hippopotamus, H. lemerlei was much smaller, roughly the size of the modern pygmy hippopotamus. The largest specimens were 6.5 ft (2 m) long and 2.5 ft (0.7 m) tall. The ancestors of H. lemerlei may have been full-sized hippos who shrunk through the process of insular dwarfism. A similar dwarfing process has occurred with hippos in many Mediterranean islands such as with the Cretan dwarf hippopotamus or the Cyprus dwarf hippopotamus.

Because H. lemerlei reached its size through dwarfing, it is properly known as the Malagasy dwarf hippopotamus, though this term is sometimes applied to the other species of Malagasy hippos. Bones of H. lemerlei have been dated to about 1,000 years ago (980±200 radiocarbon years before present[6]).

 
Speculative reconstruction of the Malagasy dwarf hippopotamus Hippopotamus lemerlei

Hippopotamus madagascariensis Edit

Also called the Malagasy pygmy hippopotamus, this species was originally classified as Hippopotamus along with H. lemerlei, and indeed the two species were roughly the same size. A review of their morphology and habitat, however, suggested a closer relationship to the modern pygmy hippopotamus.

Like the modern pygmy hippopotamus, the Malagasy pygmy hippo had eyes on the side of its head rather than high orbits and teeth of the common hippopotamus. The Malagasy pygmy hippo was similarly less aquatic, with many of its fossils found in the forested highlands of Madagascar.[8]

Fossils of both the Malagasy pygmy hippopotamus and H. lemerlei show a cursorial adaptation, distinct from the hippos on the African continent, and they would have been much better runners. This common trait is a possible indicator that both species of Malagasy hippo descended from a common ancestor, and that the similarities to the modern hippopotamus and pygmy hippopotamus are a case of parallel evolution.[11]

The Malagasy pygmy hippopotamus is classified along with the modern Liberian pygmy hippopotamus, but researchers sometimes place the Liberian hippo in two different genera. The pygmy hippopotamus was originally classified as Choeropsis by Samuel G. Morton in 1849. In 1977, the pygmy hippopotamus was reclassified as a member of Hexaprotodon[12] along with fossil species from Asia. Further examination, however, has discovered differences between the pygmy hippopotamus and the Asian hippos, prompting its reclassification by some as Choeropsis.[13]

Hippopotamus laloumena Edit

In 1990, Faure and Guerin described a third species of Malagasy hippopotamus, Hippopotamus laloumena ("laloumena" is a Malagasy word for hippopotamus), which was a distinct species. Little is known about the species, because it was identified with only a lower jaw and limb bones, recovered from a site near Mananjary on the east coast of Madagascar.[2]

The fossils clearly belong to a hippopotamus, but one much larger than any previously described Madagascan species. From what is known, the species closely resembled the modern hippopotamus, but was somewhat smaller.[11]

It is the oldest of Malagasy hippopotamus to range in the Pleistocene epoch.[14]

Diet Edit

A study demonstrating Malagasy hippopotami and contemporary Aldabrachelys tortoises dietary habits indicates that H. lemerlei and tortoises were the dominant grazer guild in Madagascar. Malagasy hippos in general however were less grass-specialised than the mainland African hippo.[15]

Oral legends and the kilopilopitsofy Edit

Limited fossil evidence for the Madagascan hippopotamus is younger than 1,000 years old. However, the hippopotamus has been surprisingly common in the oral legends of the Malagasy. In 1648, Étienne de Flacourt became the French governor of Madagascar and he wrote in his Histoire de la grande isle de Madagascar about hearing stories from the Malagasy about an animal called the mangarsahoc which closely resembled the hippopotamus. In different regions of Madagascar, stories were recorded of the tsy-aomby-aomby, the omby-rano, and the laloumena, all animals that resembled hippopotami, but few other animals on the island. In 1902, a colonial administrator named Raybaud asserted that stories he heard in the highlands could only be about Malagasy hippos still living as late as 1878.[4] The strength of these oral traditions led the IUCN to classify the Malagasy hippopotami as recent extinctions.[5][6]

In the 1990s, Burney, who was studying recent extinctions in Madagascar, collected tales about a creature called the kilopilopitsofy that had been described by villagers in the town of Belo-sur-mer, a small fishing village on the west coast. Several villagers independently described an animal that, as recently as 1976, had entered their village, was the size of a cow, was dark pigmented, grunted a lot, and when threatened, fled underwater. No known animal on Madagascar fits the description but the animal seemed remarkably like a hippopotamus.[4]

One man in the village could accurately mimic the sound of many animals, and when asked to imitate the kilopilopitsofy, he made noises very similar to that of a hippopotamus, even though he had never left the island and said he had never seen an African hippo. When shown photos, others also identified a hippopotamus-like animal, but with larger ears. Several described the creature's last appearance in 1976.[4]

Burney was reluctant to publish the study for fear of being labeled a cryptozoologist, but eventually published the results in American Anthropologist. Burney concluded that while the villagers had possibly encountered a Malagasy hippopotamus, it was also possible that the stories were inaccurate—a combination of misidentified animals, old folk traditions, and information the villagers had gathered from modern paleontology.[4][8]

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d Stuenes, Solweig (1989). "Taxonomy, habits and relationships of the sub-fossil Madagascan hippopotamuses Hippopotamus lemerlei and H. madagascariensis". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 9 (3): 241–268. doi:10.1080/02724634.1989.10011761.
  2. ^ a b Faure, M. & Guerin, C. (1990). "Hippopotamus laloumena nov. sp., la troisième éspece d'hippopotame holocene de Madagascar". Comptes Rendus de l'Académie des Sciences, Série II. 310: 1299–305.
  3. ^ a b Grubb, Peter (1993). Oliver, W.L.R. (ed.). Pigs, Peccaries, and Hippos: Status Survey and Conservation Action Plan. IUCN. Archived from the original on 2008-01-02.
  4. ^ a b c d e Burney, David A.; Ramilisonina (December 1998). "The Kilopilopitsofy, Kidoky, and Bokyboky: Accounts of Strange Animals from Belo-sur-mer, Madagascar, and the Megafaunal "Extinction Window"". American Anthropologist. 100 (4): 957–966. doi:10.1525/aa.1998.100.4.957. JSTOR 681820.
  5. ^ a b Boisserie, J.-R. (2016). Hippopotamus madagascariensis. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2016. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2016-1.RLTS.T40783A90128828.en
  6. ^ a b c Boisserie, J.-R. (2016). Hippopotamus lemerlei. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2016. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2016-1.RLTS.T40782A90128915.en
  7. ^ Nussbaum, Ronald A.; Raxworthy, Christopher J. (2000). The Ghost Geckos of Madagascar. New York: William Morrow. ISBN 978-0-380-97577-8.
  8. ^ a b c d e Tyson, Peter (1998). The Eighth Continent; Life, Death and Discovery in the Lost World of Madagascar. Ann Arbor: Museum of Zoology, University of Michigan. ISBN 978-0380794652.
  9. ^ Harris, J.M. (1991). "Family Hippopotamidae". Koobi Fora Research Project. Vol. 3. The Fossil Ungulates: Geology, Fossil Artiodactyls and Paleoenvironments. Clarendon Press, Oxford. pp. 31–85. ISBN 978-0198573999.
  10. ^ a b Oliver, W.L.R. (1995). (PDF). IBEX Journal of Mountain Ecology. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-07-05.
  11. ^ a b c d Eltringham, S.K. (1999). The Hippos. Poyser Natural History Series. London: Academic Press. ISBN 978-0-85661-131-5.
  12. ^ Coryndon (1977). "The taxonomy and nomenclature of the Hippopotamidae (Mammalia, Artiodactyla) and a description of two new fossil species". Proceedings of the Koninklijke Nederlandse Akademie van Wetenschappen. 80 (2): 61–88.
  13. ^ Boisserie, Jean-Renaud (2005). "The phylogeny and taxonomy of Hippopotamidae (Mammalia: Artiodactyla): a review based on morphology and cladistic analysis". Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. 143: 1–26. doi:10.1111/j.1096-3642.2004.00138.x.
  14. ^ Faure, Martine; Guérin, Claude; Genty, Dominique; Gommery, Dominique; Ramanivosoa, Beby (June 2010). "The oldest fossil hippopotamus (Hippopotamus laloumena) of Madagascar (Belobaka, Mahajanga Province)". Comptes Rendus. Palevol. 9 (4): 155–162. doi:10.1016/j.crpv.2010.04.002. Retrieved 2022-12-24.
  15. ^ Godfrey, L. R.; Crowley, B. E. (2016). "Madagascar's ephemeral palaeo-grazer guild: Who ate the ancient C4 grasses?". Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 283 (1834): 20160360. doi:10.1098/rspb.2016.0360. PMC 4947885. PMID 27383816.

External links Edit

  • of a Malagasy hippopotamus skeleton on display at the Paleontological Museum at the University of Oslo.

malagasy, hippopotamus, several, species, also, known, malagasy, pygmy, hippopotamus, madagascan, pygmy, hippopotamus, lived, island, madagascar, believed, extinct, animals, were, very, similar, extant, hippopotamus, pygmy, hippopotamus, fossil, record, sugges. Several species of Malagasy hippopotamus also known as Malagasy pygmy hippopotamus or Madagascan pygmy hippopotamus lived on the island of Madagascar but are now believed to be extinct The animals were very similar to the extant hippopotamus and pygmy hippopotamus The fossil record suggests that at least one species of hippopotamus lived until about 1 000 years ago 3 and other evidence suggests that the species may have survived until much more recently 4 The taxonomy of these animals is not resolved and not widely studied 5 6 Malagasy hippopotamusHippopotamus lemerlei skeleton at the Museum fur Naturkunde BerlinScientific classificationKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass MammaliaOrder ArtiodactylaFamily HippopotamidaeGenus HippopotamusSpecies Hippopotamus lemerlei 1 Hippopotamus laloumena 2 Hippopotamus madagascariensis 1 Contents 1 Discovery and taxonomy 2 Species 2 1 Hippopotamus lemerlei 2 2 Hippopotamus madagascariensis 2 3 Hippopotamus laloumena 3 Diet 4 Oral legends and the kilopilopitsofy 5 References 6 External linksDiscovery and taxonomy Edit nbsp Choeropsis madagascariensis skeleton with a H amphibius skullThe Malagasy hippopotamus was first described in the mid 19th century by Alfred Grandidier who unearthed nearly 50 individual hippos from a dried up swamp at Ambolisatra 1 thought to be Ambolisaka near Lake Ihotry 7 a few miles from the Mozambique Channel As many as four different species of hippopotamus were subsequently identified by various researchers In a careful revision of the fossil record of the Malagasy hippos Solweig Stuenes concluded that there were only two species of hippopotamus which she classified as Hippopotamus lemerlei and Hippopotamus madagascariensis 1 8 In 1990 Faure and Guerin discovered a distinct third species of hippo which they named Hippopotamus laloumena In a review of Stuenes work Harris suggested that Hip madagascariensis had much in common with the extant pygmy hippopotamus of West Africa 9 Since the extant pygmy hippopotamus was placed in the genus Hexaprotodon he used the name Hex madagascariensis Some taxonomists however consider the modern pygmy hippo to belong to the genus Choeropsis so this species may also be classified as C madagascariensis 10 The fossil record of the Malagasy hippopotamus is extensive At least seven hippopotamus bones show unequivocal signs of butchery suggesting that they survived until humans arrived on Madagascar The evidence of humans butchering the hippos also suggests their extinction may have been due to humans Despite the discovery of many fossils the hippos of Madagascar are not very well studied perhaps because researchers are interested in some of the more exotic megafauna of Madagascar such as the giant lemurs and the elephant birds 8 Species EditAlthough not well studied there is growing acceptance of three species of Malagasy hippopotamus 10 3 11 It is not known when or exactly how these hippos arrived on the island of Madagascar As hippos are semi aquatic it is possible that they survived the 400 km 248 mi trek across the channel although presumably when the water was shallower and there were perhaps small islands along the way It is possible that the three species of hippopotamus represent three distinct and successful migrations to the island 11 Hippos are the only endemic ungulates ever to have lived on Madagascar Hippopotamus lemerlei Edit Main article Hippopotamus lemerlei nbsp Hippopotamus lemerlei skullHippopotamus lemerlei bones have been mostly discovered in the rivers and lakes of western Madagascar suggesting a riparian lifestyle very similar to that of the modern hippopotamus of modern Africa H lemerlei also shared the high orbits that make it easier for the hippopotamus to see while in the water 8 The skull of H lemerlei also resembled that of the modern hippopotamus but with consistent size differences indicating that H lemerlei was a sexually dimorphic species Although a clear relative to the common hippopotamus H lemerlei was much smaller roughly the size of the modern pygmy hippopotamus The largest specimens were 6 5 ft 2 m long and 2 5 ft 0 7 m tall The ancestors of H lemerlei may have been full sized hippos who shrunk through the process of insular dwarfism A similar dwarfing process has occurred with hippos in many Mediterranean islands such as with the Cretan dwarf hippopotamus or the Cyprus dwarf hippopotamus Because H lemerlei reached its size through dwarfing it is properly known as the Malagasy dwarf hippopotamus though this term is sometimes applied to the other species of Malagasy hippos Bones of H lemerlei have been dated to about 1 000 years ago 980 200 radiocarbon years before present 6 nbsp Speculative reconstruction of the Malagasy dwarf hippopotamus Hippopotamus lemerleiHippopotamus madagascariensis Edit Main article Hippopotamus madagascariensis Also called the Malagasy pygmy hippopotamus this species was originally classified as Hippopotamus along with H lemerlei and indeed the two species were roughly the same size A review of their morphology and habitat however suggested a closer relationship to the modern pygmy hippopotamus Like the modern pygmy hippopotamus the Malagasy pygmy hippo had eyes on the side of its head rather than high orbits and teeth of the common hippopotamus The Malagasy pygmy hippo was similarly less aquatic with many of its fossils found in the forested highlands of Madagascar 8 Fossils of both the Malagasy pygmy hippopotamus and H lemerlei show a cursorial adaptation distinct from the hippos on the African continent and they would have been much better runners This common trait is a possible indicator that both species of Malagasy hippo descended from a common ancestor and that the similarities to the modern hippopotamus and pygmy hippopotamus are a case of parallel evolution 11 The Malagasy pygmy hippopotamus is classified along with the modern Liberian pygmy hippopotamus but researchers sometimes place the Liberian hippo in two different genera The pygmy hippopotamus was originally classified as Choeropsis by Samuel G Morton in 1849 In 1977 the pygmy hippopotamus was reclassified as a member of Hexaprotodon 12 along with fossil species from Asia Further examination however has discovered differences between the pygmy hippopotamus and the Asian hippos prompting its reclassification by some as Choeropsis 13 Hippopotamus laloumena Edit Main article Hippopotamus laloumena In 1990 Faure and Guerin described a third species of Malagasy hippopotamus Hippopotamus laloumena laloumena is a Malagasy word for hippopotamus which was a distinct species Little is known about the species because it was identified with only a lower jaw and limb bones recovered from a site near Mananjary on the east coast of Madagascar 2 The fossils clearly belong to a hippopotamus but one much larger than any previously described Madagascan species From what is known the species closely resembled the modern hippopotamus but was somewhat smaller 11 It is the oldest of Malagasy hippopotamus to range in the Pleistocene epoch 14 Diet EditA study demonstrating Malagasy hippopotami and contemporary Aldabrachelys tortoises dietary habits indicates that H lemerlei and tortoises were the dominant grazer guild in Madagascar Malagasy hippos in general however were less grass specialised than the mainland African hippo 15 Oral legends and the kilopilopitsofy EditLimited fossil evidence for the Madagascan hippopotamus is younger than 1 000 years old However the hippopotamus has been surprisingly common in the oral legends of the Malagasy In 1648 Etienne de Flacourt became the French governor of Madagascar and he wrote in his Histoire de la grande isle de Madagascar about hearing stories from the Malagasy about an animal called the mangarsahoc which closely resembled the hippopotamus In different regions of Madagascar stories were recorded of the tsy aomby aomby the omby rano and the laloumena all animals that resembled hippopotami but few other animals on the island In 1902 a colonial administrator named Raybaud asserted that stories he heard in the highlands could only be about Malagasy hippos still living as late as 1878 4 The strength of these oral traditions led the IUCN to classify the Malagasy hippopotami as recent extinctions 5 6 In the 1990s Burney who was studying recent extinctions in Madagascar collected tales about a creature called the kilopilopitsofy that had been described by villagers in the town of Belo sur mer a small fishing village on the west coast Several villagers independently described an animal that as recently as 1976 had entered their village was the size of a cow was dark pigmented grunted a lot and when threatened fled underwater No known animal on Madagascar fits the description but the animal seemed remarkably like a hippopotamus 4 One man in the village could accurately mimic the sound of many animals and when asked to imitate the kilopilopitsofy he made noises very similar to that of a hippopotamus even though he had never left the island and said he had never seen an African hippo When shown photos others also identified a hippopotamus like animal but with larger ears Several described the creature s last appearance in 1976 4 Burney was reluctant to publish the study for fear of being labeled a cryptozoologist but eventually published the results in American Anthropologist Burney concluded that while the villagers had possibly encountered a Malagasy hippopotamus it was also possible that the stories were inaccurate a combination of misidentified animals old folk traditions and information the villagers had gathered from modern paleontology 4 8 References Edit a b c d Stuenes Solweig 1989 Taxonomy habits and relationships of the sub fossil Madagascan hippopotamuses Hippopotamus lemerlei and H madagascariensis Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 9 3 241 268 doi 10 1080 02724634 1989 10011761 a b Faure M amp Guerin C 1990 Hippopotamus laloumena nov sp la troisieme espece d hippopotame holocene de Madagascar Comptes Rendus de l Academie des Sciences Serie II 310 1299 305 a b Grubb Peter 1993 Oliver W L R ed Pigs Peccaries and Hippos Status Survey and Conservation Action Plan IUCN Archived from the original on 2008 01 02 a b c d e Burney David A Ramilisonina December 1998 The Kilopilopitsofy Kidoky and Bokyboky Accounts of Strange Animals from Belo sur mer Madagascar and the Megafaunal Extinction Window American Anthropologist 100 4 957 966 doi 10 1525 aa 1998 100 4 957 JSTOR 681820 a b Boisserie J R 2016 Hippopotamus madagascariensis The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2016 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2016 1 RLTS T40783A90128828 en a b c Boisserie J R 2016 Hippopotamus lemerlei The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2016 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2016 1 RLTS T40782A90128915 en Nussbaum Ronald A Raxworthy Christopher J 2000 The Ghost Geckos of Madagascar New York William Morrow ISBN 978 0 380 97577 8 a b c d e Tyson Peter 1998 The Eighth Continent Life Death and Discovery in the Lost World of Madagascar Ann Arbor Museum of Zoology University of Michigan ISBN 978 0380794652 Harris J M 1991 Family Hippopotamidae Koobi Fora Research Project Vol 3 The Fossil Ungulates Geology Fossil Artiodactyls and Paleoenvironments Clarendon Press Oxford pp 31 85 ISBN 978 0198573999 a b Oliver W L R 1995 Taxonomy and Conservation Status of the Suiformes an Overview PDF IBEX Journal of Mountain Ecology Archived from the original PDF on 2007 07 05 a b c d Eltringham S K 1999 The Hippos Poyser Natural History Series London Academic Press ISBN 978 0 85661 131 5 Coryndon 1977 The taxonomy and nomenclature of the Hippopotamidae Mammalia Artiodactyla and a description of two new fossil species Proceedings of the Koninklijke Nederlandse Akademie van Wetenschappen 80 2 61 88 Boisserie Jean Renaud 2005 The phylogeny and taxonomy of Hippopotamidae Mammalia Artiodactyla a review based on morphology and cladistic analysis Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 143 1 26 doi 10 1111 j 1096 3642 2004 00138 x Faure Martine Guerin Claude Genty Dominique Gommery Dominique Ramanivosoa Beby June 2010 The oldest fossil hippopotamus Hippopotamus laloumena of Madagascar Belobaka Mahajanga Province Comptes Rendus Palevol 9 4 155 162 doi 10 1016 j crpv 2010 04 002 Retrieved 2022 12 24 Godfrey L R Crowley B E 2016 Madagascar s ephemeral palaeo grazer guild Who ate the ancient C4 grasses Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences 283 1834 20160360 doi 10 1098 rspb 2016 0360 PMC 4947885 PMID 27383816 External links Edit nbsp Mammals portalPictures of a Malagasy hippopotamus skeleton on display at the Paleontological Museum at the University of Oslo Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Malagasy hippopotamus amp oldid 1171411083, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.