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Thylacoleo

Thylacoleo ("pouch lion") is an extinct genus of carnivorous marsupials that lived in Australia from the late Pliocene to the Late Pleistocene (until around 40,000 years ago), often known as marsupial lions. They were the largest and last members of the family Thylacoleonidae, occupying the position of apex predator within Australian ecosystems. The largest and last species, Thylacoleo carnifex approached the weight of a lioness. The estimated average weight for the species ranges from 101 to 130 kg (223 to 287 lb).[1]

Thylacoleo
Temporal range: late Pliocene—late Pleistocene
Skeletal diagram of T. carnifex (top) and restored musculature based on living marsupials (bottom)
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Infraclass: Marsupialia
Order: Diprotodontia
Family: Thylacoleonidae
Genus: Thylacoleo
Owen, 1859
Type species
Thylacoleo carnifex
Species
  • T. carnifex
  • T. crassidentatus
  • T. hilli

Taxonomy edit

The genus was first published in 1859, erected to describe the type species Thylacoleo carnifex. The new taxon was established in examination of fossil specimens provided to Richard Owen. The familial alliance takes its name from this description, the so-called marsupial lions of Thylacoleonidae.

The colloquial name "marsupial lion" alludes to the genus name, which was named after its superficial resemblance to the placental lion and its ecological niche as a large predator.

Genus: Thylacoleo (Thylacopardus) – Australia's marsupial lions, that lived from about 2 million years ago, during the Late Pliocene Epoch and became extinct about 40,000 years ago, during the Late Pleistocene Epoch. Three species are known:

  • Thylacoleo carnifex The holotype cranium was collected from Lake Colongulac in 1843 by pastoralist William Adeney. A partial rostrum collected by Adeney in 1876 from the same locality would later be found to belong to the same individual.[2]
  • Thylacoleo crassidentatus lived during the Pliocene, around 5 million years ago, and was about the size of a large dog. Its fossils have been found in southeastern Queensland.[3][4]
  • Thylacoleo hilli lived during the Pliocene and was half the size of T. crassidentatus. It is the oldest member of the genus.[5]

Fossils of other representatives of Thylacoleonidae, such as Microleo and Wakaleo, date back to the Late Oligocene Epoch, some 24 million years ago.[6]

T. hilli was described by Neville Pledge in a study published in the records of the South Australia Museum in 1977. The holotype is a third premolar, discovered at a cave in Curramulka in South Australia, exhibiting the carnivorous characteristics of the genus and around half the size of T. carnifex. This tooth was collected by Alan Hill, a speleologist and founding member of the Cave Exploration Group of South Australia, while examining a site known as the "Town Cave" in 1956; the specific epithet hilli honours the collector of the first specimen.[5] Material found amidst the fauna at Bow River in New South Wales, dated to the early Pliocene, was also referred to the species in 1982. [7] A fragment of an incisor, unworn and only diagnosable to the genus, was located at a site in Curramulka, close to the Town Cave site, and referred to the species for the apparent correlation in size when compared to the better known T. carnifex.[8]

The marsupial lion is classified in the order Diprotodontia along with many other well-known marsupials such as kangaroos, possums, and the koala. It is further classified in its own family, the Thylacoleonidae, of which three genera and 11 species are recognised, all extinct. The term marsupial lion (lower case) is often applied to other members of this family. Distinct possum-like characteristics led Thylacoleo to be regarded as members of Phalangeroidea for a few decades. Though a few authors continued to hint at phalangeroid affinities for thylacoleonids as recently as the 1990s, cranial and other characters have generally led to their inclusion within vombatiformes, and as stem-members of the wombat lineage.[9] Marsupial lions and other ecologically and morphologically diverse vombatiforms were once represented by over 60 species of carnivorous, herbivorous, terrestrial and arboreal forms ranging in size from 3 kg to 2.5 tonnes. Only two families represented by four herbivorous species (koalas and three species of wombat) have survived into modern times and are considered the marsupial lion's closest living relatives.[10]

Evolution edit

The ancestors of thylacoleonids are believed to have been herbivores, something unusual for carnivores. They are members of the Vombatiformes, an almost entirely herbivorous order of marsupials, the only extant representatives of which are koalas and wombats, as well as extinct members such as the diprotodontids and palorchestids.[11] The group first appeared in the Late Oligocene. The earliest thylacoleonids like Microleo were small possum-like animals,[12] with the group increasing in size during the Miocene, with representatives like the leopoard sized Wakaleo. The genus Thylacoleo first appeared during the Pliocene, and represented the only extant genus of the family from that time until the end of the Pleistocene. The youngest representative of Thylacoleo and the thylacoleonids, T. carnifex, is the largest known member of the family.[11] The earliest thylacoleonids are thought to have been arboreal (tree dwelling) animals,[13] while Thylacoleo is thought to be terrestrial with some climbing capabilities.[14]

Description edit

T. carnifex is the largest carnivorous mammal known to have ever existed in Australia, and one of the largest metatherian carnivores known (comparable to Thylacosmilus and Borhyaena species, but smaller than Proborhyaena gigantea). Individuals ranged up to around 75 cm (30 in) high at the shoulder and about 150 cm (59 in) from head to tail. Measurements taken from a number of specimens show they averaged 101 to 130 kg (223 to 287 lb) in weight, although individuals as large as 124–160 kg (273–353 lb) might not have been uncommon, and the largest weight was of 128–164 kg (282–362 lb).[14] This would make it comparable to female lions and female tigers in general size.

Skull edit

 
Skull of Thylacoleo carnifex

Like other thylacoleonids, Thylacoleo had blade-like third premolar teeth in the upper and lower jaws, that functioned as the carnassial teeth, with these teeth being present much further forwards in the jaw than in other mammals.[15][16] Compared to earlier thyacoleonids, the third premolars were considerably enlarged.[17] Thylacoleo also had a proportionally large pair of first incisors in the upper and lower jaws, which functioned analogously to other carnivores canine teeth.[15][18] They also had true canines but they served little purpose as they were stubby and not very sharp.[19] Compared to earlier thylacoleonids, the number of molar teeth was reduced.[17]

Pound for pound, T. carnifex had the strongest bite of any mammal species, living or extinct; a T. carnifex weighing 101 kg (223 lb) had a bite comparable to that of a 250 kg African lion, and research suggests that Thylacoleo could hunt and take prey much larger than itself.[16] Larger animals that were likely prey include Diprotodon spp. and giant kangaroos. It seems improbable that Thylacoleo could achieve as high a bite force as a modern-day lion; however, this might have been possible when taking into consideration the size of its brain and skull. Carnivores usually have rather large brains when compared to herbivorous marsupials, which lessens the amount of bone that can be devoted to enhancing bite force. Thylacoleo however, is thought to have had substantially stronger muscle attachments and therefore a smaller brain.[20] Some later studies questioned the ability of the canine teeth to deliver a killing bite.[21]

Using 3D modeling based on X-ray computed tomography scans, marsupial lions were found to be unable to use the prolonged, suffocating bite typical of living big cats. They instead had an extremely efficient and unique bite; the incisors would have been used to stab at and pierce the flesh of their prey while the more specialised carnassials crushed the windpipe, severed the spinal cord, and lacerated the major blood vessels such as the carotid artery and jugular vein. Compared to an African lion which may take 15 minutes to kill a large catch, the marsupial lion could kill a large animal in less than a minute. The skull was so specialized for big game that it was very inefficient at catching smaller animals, which possibly contributed to its extinction.[22][23]

Postcranium edit

 
Skeleton at Naracoorte Caves

Thylacoleo had highly mobile and powerful forelimbs used to grapple prey, with each manus having a single very large retractable hooked claw set on large semi-opposable thumbs, which are suggested to have been used deal a killing blow.[21]

The hind feet had four functional toes, the first digit being much reduced in size, but possessing a roughened pad similar to that of possums, which may have assisted with climbing. The discovery in 2005 of a specimen which included complete hind feet provided evidence that the marsupial lion exhibited syndactyly (fused second and third toes) like other diprotodonts.[24]

Its strong forelimbs and retracting claws mean that Thylacoleo possibly climbed trees and perhaps carried carcasses to keep the kill for itself (similar to the leopard today).[25] The climbing ability would have also helped them climb out of caves, which could therefore have been used as dens to rear their young.[26] Specialised tail bones called chevrons strengthened the tail, likely allowing the animal to use it to prop itself up while rearing on its hind legs, which may have been done when climbing or attacking prey.[26]

The lumbar region is relatively rigid and straight, and suggests that the lower back was relatively inflexible.[26]

Behaviour and diet edit

Diet edit

When Thylacoleo was first described by Richard Owen, he considered it to be a carnivore, based on the morphology of its skull and teeth.[27] However other anatomists, such as William Henry Flower disagreed. Flower was the first to place Thylacoleo with the Diprotodonts, noting its skull and teeth to be laid out more like those of the koala and the wombat, and suggested that it was more likely a herbivore. Owen did not disagree with Flower's placement of Thylacoleo with the Diprotodonts, but still maintained that it was a carnivore, despite its herbivorous ancestry.[28] Owen found little support in his lifetime, despite the pointing out of Thylacoleo's retractable claws, something only found in mammalian carnivores,[29] and its lack of any ability to chew plant material.[28] In 1911, a study by Spencer and Walcott claimed that certain marks on the bones of megafauna had been made by Thylacoleo, but according to Horton (1979) they were not sufficiently rigorous, resulting in their arguments being strongly challenged by later scholars, such as Anderson (1929), and later Gill (1951, 1952, 1954), thereby leaving the issue unresolved.[30] In 1981, another paper was published arguing that certain cuts to bones of large marsupials had been caused by Thylacoleo. This paper by Horton and Wright was able to counter earlier arguments that such marks were the result of humans, largely by pointing out the presence of similar marks on the opposite side of many bones. They concluded that humans were extremely unlikely to have made the marks in question, but that if so "they had set out to produce only marks consistent with what Thylacoleo would produce".[30] Since then, the academic consensus has emerged that Thylacoleo was a predator and a hypercarnivore.[21]

Besides the most common hypothesis that it was an active predator, a variety of other theories existed in the late 19th to early 20th centuries as to the diet and feeding of Thylacoleo, with hypotheses of it being a scavenger filling the ecological niche of hyenas,[31] being a specialist of crocodile eggs,[25] or even a melon-eater.[32] As late as 1954, doubts were still being raised as to whether it was actually a hypercarnivore.[21]

The marsupial lion's limb proportions and muscle mass distribution indicate that, although it was a powerful animal, it was not a particularly fast runner. Paleontologists conjecture that it was an ambush predator, either sneaking up and then leaping upon its prey,[26] or dropping down on it from overhanging tree branches.[33] Trace fossils in the form of claw marks and bones from caves in Western Australia analyzed by Gavin Prideaux et al. indicate marsupial lions could also climb rock faces, and likely reared their young in such caves as a way of protecting them from potential predators.[34] It is thought to have hunted large animals such as the enormous Diprotodon and giant browsing kangaroos like Sthenurus and Procoptodon, and competed with other predatory animals such as the giant monitor lizard, Megalania, and terrestrial crocodiles such as Quinkana. The marsupial lion may have cached kills in trees in a manner similar to the modern leopard.[35] Like many predators, it was probably also an opportunistic scavenger, feeding on carrion and driving off less powerful predators from their kills. It also may have shared behaviours exhibited by recent diprotodont marsupials such as kangaroos, like digging shallow holes under trees to reduce body temperature during the day.[36]

Senses edit

CT scans of a well-preserved skull have allowed scientists to study internal structures and create a brain endocast showing the surface features of the animal's brain. The parietal lobes, visual cortex, and olfactory bulbs of the cerebrum were enlarged, indicating the marsupial lion had good senses of hearing, sight, and smell, as might be expected of an active predator. Also, a pair of blind canals within the nasal cavity were probably associated with detecting pheromones as in the Tasmanian devil. This indicates it most likely had seasonal mating habits and would "sniff out" a mate when in season.[37]

Feeding edit

The feeding behaviour of Thylacoleo remains a topic of academic debate, largely due the lack of any living analogue.[21] While considered a powerful hunter, and a fierce predator, it has been theorized that due to its physiology Thylacoleo was, in fact, a slow runner, limiting its ability to chase prey. Analysis of its scapula suggests "walking and trotting, rather than climbing ... the pelvis similarly agrees with that of ambulators and cursors [walkers and runners]". These bones indicate that Thylacoleo was a slow to medium-paced runner, which is likely to mean it was an ambush predator. That fits with the stripes: camouflage of the kind one would need for stalking and hiding in a largely forested habitat (like tigers or leopards) rather than chasing across open spaces (like lions)."[38] It may have functioned generally much like a larger analog of the Tasmanian devil.[26] New evidence also suggests that it may have been arboreal, and was at the very least capable of climbing trees.[25]

Incisions on bones of Macropus titan, and the general morphology of Thylacoleo suggests that it fed in a similar manner to modern cheetahs, by using their sharp teeth to slice open the ribcage of their prey, thereby accessing the internal organs. They may have killed by using their front claws as either stabbing weapons or as a way to grab their prey with strangulation or suffocation.[30]

Palaeoecology edit

 
Life restoration of Thylacoleo carnifex

Numerous fossil discoveries indicate the marsupial lion was distributed across much of the Australian continent. A large proportion of its environment would have been similar to the southern third of Australia today, semiarid, open scrub and woodland punctuated by waterholes and water courses.[citation needed]

It would have coexisted with many of the so-called Australian megafauna such as Diprotodon, giant kangaroos, and Megalania, as well as giant wallabies like Protemnodon, the giant wombat Phascolonus, the giant snake Wonambi, and the thunderbird Genyornis.[37] T. hilli was a similar size to a contemporaneous thylacoleonid species, Wakaleo alcootaensis, and may have occupied habitat to the exclusion of that carnivore.[39]

Australia's Pleistocene megafauna would have been the prey for the agile T. carnifex, who was especially adapted for hunting large animals, but was not particularly suited to catching smaller prey. The relatively quick reduction in the numbers of its primary food source around 40,000 to 50,000 years ago probably led to the decline and eventual extinction of the marsupial lion. The arrival of humans in Australia and the use of fire-stick farming precipitated their decline.[40] The extinction of T. carnifex makes Australia unique from the other continents because no substantial, apex mammalian predators have replaced the marsupial lions after their disappearance.[41]

Extinction edit

It was believed[by whom?] that the extinction was due to the climate changes, but human activities as an extinction driver of the most recent species is possible yet unproven. There is a growing consensus[by whom?] that the extinction of the megafauna was caused by progressive drying starting about 700,000 years ago (700 ka).[citation needed] It is revealed recently[when?] that there was a major change in glacial-interglacial cycles after ~450 ka. As for human involvement's contribution to the extinction, one argument is that the arrival of humans was coincident with the disappearance of all the extinct megafauna. This is supported by the claims that during MIS3, climatic conditions are relatively stable and no major climate change would cause the mass extinction of megafauna including Thylacoleo.[42]

Although believed to have been a victim of climate change, some scientists[which?] now believe Thylacoleo to have been exterminated by humans altering the ecosystem with fire in addition to hunting its prey. "They found Sporormiella spores, which grow in herbivore dung, virtually disappeared around 41,000 years ago, a time when no known climate transformation was taking place. At the same time, the incidence of fire increased, as shown by a steep rise in charcoal fragments. It appears that humans, who arrived in Australia around this time, hunted the megafauna to extinction".[43] Following the extinction of T. carnifex, no other apex mammalian predators have taken its place.[44]

Discoveries edit

 
Drawing of T. carnifex skull fragments, 1859

The first specimens of Thylacoleo were collected in the early 1830s from the Wellington Valley region of New South Wales by Major (later Sir) Thomas Mitchell, however they were not recognised as Thylacoleo at the time.[19]

The species was first described by Richard Owen in 1859,[19] from a fragmentary specimen discovered by William Adeney near Lake Colungolac, near Camperdown in Victoria[27]

In 2002, eight remarkably complete skeletons of T. carnifex were discovered in a limestone cave under Nullarbor Plain, where the animals fell through a narrow opening in the plain above. Based on the placement of their skeletons, at least some survived the fall, only to die of thirst and starvation.[45][46]

In 2008, rock art depicting what some speculate to be Thylacoleo was discovered on the northwestern coast of the Kimberley. However, the thylacine, a marsupial that had a striped coat like depicted in the rock art, has been argued to be the more likely subject of the work.[47] The drawing represented only the second example of megafauna depicted by the indigenous inhabitants of Australia. The image contains details that would otherwise have remained only conjecture; the tail is depicted with a tufted tip, it has pointed ears rather than rounded, and the coat is striped. The prominence of the eye, a feature rarely shown in other animal images of the region, raises the possibility that the creature may have been a nocturnal hunter.[48] In 2009, a second image was found that depicts a Thylacoleo interacting with a hunter who is in the act of spearing or fending the animal off with a multiple-barbed spear. Much smaller and less detailed than the 2008 find, it may depict a thylacine, but the comparative size indicates a Thylacoleo is more likely, meaning that it is possible that Thylacoleo was extant until more recently than previously thought.[49]

In 2016, trace fossils in Tight Entrance Cave were identified as being the scratch marks of a Thylacoleo.[25]

Fossils edit

The first Thylacoleo fossil findings, discovered by Thomas Mitchell were found in the 1830s in the Wellington Valley of New South Wales, though not recognised as such at the time. The generic holotype, consisting of broken teeth, jaws, and a skull was discovered by a pastoralist, William Avery, near Lake Colungolac from which the species Thylacoleo carnifex was described by Richard Owen.[27] It was not until 1966 that the first nearly-complete skeleton was found. The only pieces missing were a foot and the tail. Currently, the Nullarbor Plain of West Australia remains to be the greatest finding site. These fossils now reside at the Australian Museum.[50][29]

It was reported that in 2012, an accumulation of vertebrate trace and body fossils were found in the Victorian Volcanic Plains in southeastern Australia. It was determined that Thylacoleo was the only taxon that represented three divergent fossil records: skeletal, footprints, and bite marks. What this suggests is that these large carnivores had behavioral characteristics that could have increased their likelihood of their presence being detected within a fossil fauna.[51]

A characteristic seen in the remains of skull fragments is a set of carnassial teeth, suggesting the carnivorous habits of Thylacoleo. Tooth fossils of the Thylacoleo exhibit specific degrees of erosion that are credited to the utility of the carnassial teeth remains as they were used for hunting and consuming prey in a prehistoric Australia teeming with other megafauna. The specialisation found in the dental history of the marsupial indicates its status in the predatory hierarchy in which it existed.[52]

References edit

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  38. ^ Monbiot, George (2014-04-03). "'Like a demon in a medieval book': Is this how the marsupial lion killed prey?". The Guardian.
  39. ^ Murray, P.; Megirian, D. (1990). "Further observations on the morphology of Wakaleo vanderleueri (Marsupialia:Thylacoleonidae) from the mid-Miocene Camfield beds, Northern Territory". The Beagle: Occasional Papers of the Northern Territory Museum of Arts and Sciences. 7 (1): 91–102.
  40. ^ "'Humans killed off Australia's giant beasts'". BBC News. 24 March 2012.
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  42. ^ "Climate change frames debate over the extinction of megafauna in Sahul (Pleistocene Australia-New Guinea)" (PDF).
  43. ^ "Humans killed off Australia's giant beasts". BBC. 24 March 2012. Retrieved 7 May 2019.
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  47. ^ Welch, David M. (June 2015). "Thy Thylacoleo is a thylacine". Australian Archaeology. 80 (1): 40–47. doi:10.1080/03122417.2015.11682043. ISSN 0312-2417. S2CID 146358676.
  48. ^ Akerman, Kim; Willing, Tim (March 2009). "An ancient rock painting of a marsupial lion, Thylacoleo carnifex, from the Kimberley, Western Australia". Antiquity. Retrieved 11 December 2012.
  49. ^ Akerman, Kim (December 2009). "Interaction between humans and megafauna depicted in Australian rock art?". Antiquity. Retrieved 11 December 2012.
  50. ^ Musser, Anne (29 November 2018). "Thylacoleo carnifex". Australian Museum. Retrieved 7 May 2019.
  51. ^ Camens, Aaron Bruce; Carey, Stephen Paul (2013-01-02). "Contemporaneous Trace and Body Fossils from a Late Pleistocene Lakebed in Victoria, Australia, Allow Assessment of Bias in the Fossil Record". PLOS ONE. 8 (1): e52957. Bibcode:2013PLoSO...852957C. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0052957. PMC 3534647. PMID 23301008.
  52. ^ "IV. On the fossil mammals of Australia. - Part II. Description of an almost entire skull of the thylacoleo carnifex, Owen, from a freshwater deposit, Darling Downs, Queensland". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. 156: 73–82. 1866. doi:10.1098/rstl.1866.0004. S2CID 110169146.

External links edit

  • New study finds no evidence for theory humans wiped out megafauna
  • Thylacoleo - Australia's Marsupial Lion
  • PLEDGE. N 1977, A NEW SPECIES OF THYLACOLEO (MARSUPIALIA: THYLACOLEONIDAE) WITH NOTES ON THE OCCURRENCES AND DISTRIBUTION OF THYLACOLEONIDAE IN SOUTH AUSTRALIA[permanent dead link]

thylacoleo, pouch, lion, extinct, genus, carnivorous, marsupials, that, lived, australia, from, late, pliocene, late, pleistocene, until, around, years, often, known, marsupial, lions, they, were, largest, last, members, family, nidae, occupying, position, ape. Thylacoleo pouch lion is an extinct genus of carnivorous marsupials that lived in Australia from the late Pliocene to the Late Pleistocene until around 40 000 years ago often known as marsupial lions They were the largest and last members of the family Thylacoleonidae occupying the position of apex predator within Australian ecosystems The largest and last species Thylacoleo carnifex approached the weight of a lioness The estimated average weight for the species ranges from 101 to 130 kg 223 to 287 lb 1 ThylacoleoTemporal range late Pliocene late PleistoceneSkeletal diagram of T carnifex top and restored musculature based on living marsupials bottom Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass MammaliaInfraclass MarsupialiaOrder DiprotodontiaFamily ThylacoleonidaeGenus ThylacoleoOwen 1859Type species Thylacoleo carnifexSpecies T carnifex T crassidentatus T hilli Contents 1 Taxonomy 2 Evolution 3 Description 3 1 Skull 3 2 Postcranium 4 Behaviour and diet 4 1 Diet 4 2 Senses 5 Feeding 6 Palaeoecology 6 1 Extinction 7 Discoveries 8 Fossils 9 References 10 External linksTaxonomy editThe genus was first published in 1859 erected to describe the type species Thylacoleo carnifex The new taxon was established in examination of fossil specimens provided to Richard Owen The familial alliance takes its name from this description the so called marsupial lions of Thylacoleonidae The colloquial name marsupial lion alludes to the genus name which was named after its superficial resemblance to the placental lion and its ecological niche as a large predator Genus Thylacoleo Thylacopardus Australia s marsupial lions that lived from about 2 million years ago during the Late Pliocene Epoch and became extinct about 40 000 years ago during the Late Pleistocene Epoch Three species are known Thylacoleo carnifex The holotype cranium was collected from Lake Colongulac in 1843 by pastoralist William Adeney A partial rostrum collected by Adeney in 1876 from the same locality would later be found to belong to the same individual 2 Thylacoleo crassidentatus lived during the Pliocene around 5 million years ago and was about the size of a large dog Its fossils have been found in southeastern Queensland 3 4 Thylacoleo hilli lived during the Pliocene and was half the size of T crassidentatus It is the oldest member of the genus 5 Fossils of other representatives of Thylacoleonidae such as Microleo and Wakaleo date back to the Late Oligocene Epoch some 24 million years ago 6 T hilli was described by Neville Pledge in a study published in the records of the South Australia Museum in 1977 The holotype is a third premolar discovered at a cave in Curramulka in South Australia exhibiting the carnivorous characteristics of the genus and around half the size of T carnifex This tooth was collected by Alan Hill a speleologist and founding member of the Cave Exploration Group of South Australia while examining a site known as the Town Cave in 1956 the specific epithet hilli honours the collector of the first specimen 5 Material found amidst the fauna at Bow River in New South Wales dated to the early Pliocene was also referred to the species in 1982 7 A fragment of an incisor unworn and only diagnosable to the genus was located at a site in Curramulka close to the Town Cave site and referred to the species for the apparent correlation in size when compared to the better known T carnifex 8 The marsupial lion is classified in the order Diprotodontia along with many other well known marsupials such as kangaroos possums and the koala It is further classified in its own family the Thylacoleonidae of which three genera and 11 species are recognised all extinct The term marsupial lion lower case is often applied to other members of this family Distinct possum like characteristics led Thylacoleo to be regarded as members of Phalangeroidea for a few decades Though a few authors continued to hint at phalangeroid affinities for thylacoleonids as recently as the 1990s cranial and other characters have generally led to their inclusion within vombatiformes and as stem members of the wombat lineage 9 Marsupial lions and other ecologically and morphologically diverse vombatiforms were once represented by over 60 species of carnivorous herbivorous terrestrial and arboreal forms ranging in size from 3 kg to 2 5 tonnes Only two families represented by four herbivorous species koalas and three species of wombat have survived into modern times and are considered the marsupial lion s closest living relatives 10 Evolution editThe ancestors of thylacoleonids are believed to have been herbivores something unusual for carnivores They are members of the Vombatiformes an almost entirely herbivorous order of marsupials the only extant representatives of which are koalas and wombats as well as extinct members such as the diprotodontids and palorchestids 11 The group first appeared in the Late Oligocene The earliest thylacoleonids like Microleo were small possum like animals 12 with the group increasing in size during the Miocene with representatives like the leopoard sized Wakaleo The genus Thylacoleo first appeared during the Pliocene and represented the only extant genus of the family from that time until the end of the Pleistocene The youngest representative of Thylacoleo and the thylacoleonids T carnifex is the largest known member of the family 11 The earliest thylacoleonids are thought to have been arboreal tree dwelling animals 13 while Thylacoleo is thought to be terrestrial with some climbing capabilities 14 Description editT carnifex is the largest carnivorous mammal known to have ever existed in Australia and one of the largest metatherian carnivores known comparable to Thylacosmilus and Borhyaena species but smaller than Proborhyaena gigantea Individuals ranged up to around 75 cm 30 in high at the shoulder and about 150 cm 59 in from head to tail Measurements taken from a number of specimens show they averaged 101 to 130 kg 223 to 287 lb in weight although individuals as large as 124 160 kg 273 353 lb might not have been uncommon and the largest weight was of 128 164 kg 282 362 lb 14 This would make it comparable to female lions and female tigers in general size Skull edit nbsp Skull of Thylacoleo carnifexLike other thylacoleonids Thylacoleo had blade like third premolar teeth in the upper and lower jaws that functioned as the carnassial teeth with these teeth being present much further forwards in the jaw than in other mammals 15 16 Compared to earlier thyacoleonids the third premolars were considerably enlarged 17 Thylacoleo also had a proportionally large pair of first incisors in the upper and lower jaws which functioned analogously to other carnivores canine teeth 15 18 They also had true canines but they served little purpose as they were stubby and not very sharp 19 Compared to earlier thylacoleonids the number of molar teeth was reduced 17 Pound for pound T carnifex had the strongest bite of any mammal species living or extinct a T carnifex weighing 101 kg 223 lb had a bite comparable to that of a 250 kg African lion and research suggests that Thylacoleo could hunt and take prey much larger than itself 16 Larger animals that were likely prey include Diprotodon spp and giant kangaroos It seems improbable that Thylacoleo could achieve as high a bite force as a modern day lion however this might have been possible when taking into consideration the size of its brain and skull Carnivores usually have rather large brains when compared to herbivorous marsupials which lessens the amount of bone that can be devoted to enhancing bite force Thylacoleo however is thought to have had substantially stronger muscle attachments and therefore a smaller brain 20 Some later studies questioned the ability of the canine teeth to deliver a killing bite 21 Using 3D modeling based on X ray computed tomography scans marsupial lions were found to be unable to use the prolonged suffocating bite typical of living big cats They instead had an extremely efficient and unique bite the incisors would have been used to stab at and pierce the flesh of their prey while the more specialised carnassials crushed the windpipe severed the spinal cord and lacerated the major blood vessels such as the carotid artery and jugular vein Compared to an African lion which may take 15 minutes to kill a large catch the marsupial lion could kill a large animal in less than a minute The skull was so specialized for big game that it was very inefficient at catching smaller animals which possibly contributed to its extinction 22 23 Postcranium edit nbsp Skeleton at Naracoorte CavesThylacoleo had highly mobile and powerful forelimbs used to grapple prey with each manus having a single very large retractable hooked claw set on large semi opposable thumbs which are suggested to have been used deal a killing blow 21 The hind feet had four functional toes the first digit being much reduced in size but possessing a roughened pad similar to that of possums which may have assisted with climbing The discovery in 2005 of a specimen which included complete hind feet provided evidence that the marsupial lion exhibited syndactyly fused second and third toes like other diprotodonts 24 Its strong forelimbs and retracting claws mean that Thylacoleo possibly climbed trees and perhaps carried carcasses to keep the kill for itself similar to the leopard today 25 The climbing ability would have also helped them climb out of caves which could therefore have been used as dens to rear their young 26 Specialised tail bones called chevrons strengthened the tail likely allowing the animal to use it to prop itself up while rearing on its hind legs which may have been done when climbing or attacking prey 26 The lumbar region is relatively rigid and straight and suggests that the lower back was relatively inflexible 26 Behaviour and diet editDiet edit When Thylacoleo was first described by Richard Owen he considered it to be a carnivore based on the morphology of its skull and teeth 27 However other anatomists such as William Henry Flower disagreed Flower was the first to place Thylacoleo with the Diprotodonts noting its skull and teeth to be laid out more like those of the koala and the wombat and suggested that it was more likely a herbivore Owen did not disagree with Flower s placement of Thylacoleo with the Diprotodonts but still maintained that it was a carnivore despite its herbivorous ancestry 28 Owen found little support in his lifetime despite the pointing out of Thylacoleo s retractable claws something only found in mammalian carnivores 29 and its lack of any ability to chew plant material 28 In 1911 a study by Spencer and Walcott claimed that certain marks on the bones of megafauna had been made by Thylacoleo but according to Horton 1979 they were not sufficiently rigorous resulting in their arguments being strongly challenged by later scholars such as Anderson 1929 and later Gill 1951 1952 1954 thereby leaving the issue unresolved 30 In 1981 another paper was published arguing that certain cuts to bones of large marsupials had been caused by Thylacoleo This paper by Horton and Wright was able to counter earlier arguments that such marks were the result of humans largely by pointing out the presence of similar marks on the opposite side of many bones They concluded that humans were extremely unlikely to have made the marks in question but that if so they had set out to produce only marks consistent with what Thylacoleo would produce 30 Since then the academic consensus has emerged that Thylacoleo was a predator and a hypercarnivore 21 Besides the most common hypothesis that it was an active predator a variety of other theories existed in the late 19th to early 20th centuries as to the diet and feeding of Thylacoleo with hypotheses of it being a scavenger filling the ecological niche of hyenas 31 being a specialist of crocodile eggs 25 or even a melon eater 32 As late as 1954 doubts were still being raised as to whether it was actually a hypercarnivore 21 The marsupial lion s limb proportions and muscle mass distribution indicate that although it was a powerful animal it was not a particularly fast runner Paleontologists conjecture that it was an ambush predator either sneaking up and then leaping upon its prey 26 or dropping down on it from overhanging tree branches 33 Trace fossils in the form of claw marks and bones from caves in Western Australia analyzed by Gavin Prideaux et al indicate marsupial lions could also climb rock faces and likely reared their young in such caves as a way of protecting them from potential predators 34 It is thought to have hunted large animals such as the enormous Diprotodon and giant browsing kangaroos like Sthenurus and Procoptodon and competed with other predatory animals such as the giant monitor lizard Megalania and terrestrial crocodiles such as Quinkana The marsupial lion may have cached kills in trees in a manner similar to the modern leopard 35 Like many predators it was probably also an opportunistic scavenger feeding on carrion and driving off less powerful predators from their kills It also may have shared behaviours exhibited by recent diprotodont marsupials such as kangaroos like digging shallow holes under trees to reduce body temperature during the day 36 Senses edit CT scans of a well preserved skull have allowed scientists to study internal structures and create a brain endocast showing the surface features of the animal s brain The parietal lobes visual cortex and olfactory bulbs of the cerebrum were enlarged indicating the marsupial lion had good senses of hearing sight and smell as might be expected of an active predator Also a pair of blind canals within the nasal cavity were probably associated with detecting pheromones as in the Tasmanian devil This indicates it most likely had seasonal mating habits and would sniff out a mate when in season 37 Feeding editThe feeding behaviour of Thylacoleo remains a topic of academic debate largely due the lack of any living analogue 21 While considered a powerful hunter and a fierce predator it has been theorized that due to its physiology Thylacoleo was in fact a slow runner limiting its ability to chase prey Analysis of its scapula suggests walking and trotting rather than climbing the pelvis similarly agrees with that of ambulators and cursors walkers and runners These bones indicate that Thylacoleo was a slow to medium paced runner which is likely to mean it was an ambush predator That fits with the stripes camouflage of the kind one would need for stalking and hiding in a largely forested habitat like tigers or leopards rather than chasing across open spaces like lions 38 It may have functioned generally much like a larger analog of the Tasmanian devil 26 New evidence also suggests that it may have been arboreal and was at the very least capable of climbing trees 25 Incisions on bones of Macropus titan and the general morphology of Thylacoleo suggests that it fed in a similar manner to modern cheetahs by using their sharp teeth to slice open the ribcage of their prey thereby accessing the internal organs They may have killed by using their front claws as either stabbing weapons or as a way to grab their prey with strangulation or suffocation 30 Palaeoecology edit nbsp Life restoration of Thylacoleo carnifexNumerous fossil discoveries indicate the marsupial lion was distributed across much of the Australian continent A large proportion of its environment would have been similar to the southern third of Australia today semiarid open scrub and woodland punctuated by waterholes and water courses citation needed It would have coexisted with many of the so called Australian megafauna such as Diprotodon giant kangaroos and Megalania as well as giant wallabies like Protemnodon the giant wombat Phascolonus the giant snake Wonambi and the thunderbird Genyornis 37 T hilli was a similar size to a contemporaneous thylacoleonid species Wakaleo alcootaensis and may have occupied habitat to the exclusion of that carnivore 39 Australia s Pleistocene megafauna would have been the prey for the agile T carnifex who was especially adapted for hunting large animals but was not particularly suited to catching smaller prey The relatively quick reduction in the numbers of its primary food source around 40 000 to 50 000 years ago probably led to the decline and eventual extinction of the marsupial lion The arrival of humans in Australia and the use of fire stick farming precipitated their decline 40 The extinction of T carnifex makes Australia unique from the other continents because no substantial apex mammalian predators have replaced the marsupial lions after their disappearance 41 Extinction edit It was believed by whom that the extinction was due to the climate changes but human activities as an extinction driver of the most recent species is possible yet unproven There is a growing consensus by whom that the extinction of the megafauna was caused by progressive drying starting about 700 000 years ago 700 ka citation needed It is revealed recently when that there was a major change in glacial interglacial cycles after 450 ka As for human involvement s contribution to the extinction one argument is that the arrival of humans was coincident with the disappearance of all the extinct megafauna This is supported by the claims that during MIS3 climatic conditions are relatively stable and no major climate change would cause the mass extinction of megafauna including Thylacoleo 42 Although believed to have been a victim of climate change some scientists which now believe Thylacoleo to have been exterminated by humans altering the ecosystem with fire in addition to hunting its prey They found Sporormiella spores which grow in herbivore dung virtually disappeared around 41 000 years ago a time when no known climate transformation was taking place At the same time the incidence of fire increased as shown by a steep rise in charcoal fragments It appears that humans who arrived in Australia around this time hunted the megafauna to extinction 43 Following the extinction of T carnifex no other apex mammalian predators have taken its place 44 Discoveries edit nbsp Drawing of T carnifex skull fragments 1859The first specimens of Thylacoleo were collected in the early 1830s from the Wellington Valley region of New South Wales by Major later Sir Thomas Mitchell however they were not recognised as Thylacoleo at the time 19 The species was first described by Richard Owen in 1859 19 from a fragmentary specimen discovered by William Adeney near Lake Colungolac near Camperdown in Victoria 27 In 2002 eight remarkably complete skeletons of T carnifex were discovered in a limestone cave under Nullarbor Plain where the animals fell through a narrow opening in the plain above Based on the placement of their skeletons at least some survived the fall only to die of thirst and starvation 45 46 In 2008 rock art depicting what some speculate to be Thylacoleo was discovered on the northwestern coast of the Kimberley However the thylacine a marsupial that had a striped coat like depicted in the rock art has been argued to be the more likely subject of the work 47 The drawing represented only the second example of megafauna depicted by the indigenous inhabitants of Australia The image contains details that would otherwise have remained only conjecture the tail is depicted with a tufted tip it has pointed ears rather than rounded and the coat is striped The prominence of the eye a feature rarely shown in other animal images of the region raises the possibility that the creature may have been a nocturnal hunter 48 In 2009 a second image was found that depicts a Thylacoleo interacting with a hunter who is in the act of spearing or fending the animal off with a multiple barbed spear Much smaller and less detailed than the 2008 find it may depict a thylacine but the comparative size indicates a Thylacoleo is more likely meaning that it is possible that Thylacoleo was extant until more recently than previously thought 49 In 2016 trace fossils in Tight Entrance Cave were identified as being the scratch marks of a Thylacoleo 25 Fossils editThe first Thylacoleo fossil findings discovered by Thomas Mitchell were found in the 1830s in the Wellington Valley of New South Wales though not recognised as such at the time The generic holotype consisting of broken teeth jaws and a skull was discovered by a pastoralist William Avery near Lake Colungolac from which the species Thylacoleo carnifex was described by Richard Owen 27 It was not until 1966 that the first nearly complete skeleton was found The only pieces missing were a foot and the tail Currently the Nullarbor Plain of West Australia remains to be the greatest finding site These fossils now reside at the Australian Museum 50 29 It was reported that in 2012 an accumulation of vertebrate trace and body fossils were found in the Victorian Volcanic Plains in southeastern Australia It was determined that Thylacoleo was the only taxon that represented three divergent fossil records skeletal footprints and bite marks What this suggests is that these large carnivores had behavioral characteristics that could have increased their likelihood of their presence being detected within a fossil fauna 51 A characteristic seen in the remains of skull fragments is a set of carnassial teeth suggesting the carnivorous habits of Thylacoleo Tooth fossils of the Thylacoleo exhibit specific degrees of erosion that are credited to the utility of the carnassial teeth remains as they were used for hunting and consuming prey in a prehistoric Australia teeming with other megafauna The specialisation found in the dental history of the marsupial indicates its status in the predatory hierarchy in which it existed 52 References edit Alloing Seguier Leanie Sanchez Villagra Marcelo R Lee Michael S Y Lebrun Renaud 2013 The Bony Labyrinth in Diprotodontian Marsupial Mammals Diversity in Extant and Extinct Forms and Relationships with Size and Phylogeny Journal of Mammalian Evolution 20 3 191 198 doi 10 1007 s10914 013 9228 3 S2CID 16385939 Gill E D 25 February 1973 Antipodal distribution of the holotype bones of Thylacoleo carnifex Owen Marsupialia Science Reports of the Tohoku University Second Series Geology 6 497 499 Retrieved 13 August 2020 Woods J T 1956 The skull of Thylacoleo carnifex Memoirs of the Queensland Museum 13 125 140 Bartholomai Alan 1962 A new species of Thylacoleo and notes on some caudal vertebrae of Palorchestes azael Memoirs of the Queensland Museum 14 33 40 a b Pledge N S 1977 A new species of Thylacoleo Marsupialia Thylacoleonidae with notes on the occurrences and distribution of Thylacoleonidae in South Australia Records of the South Australian Museum 17 277 283 Long J A Archer M Flannery T amp Hand S 2002 Prehistoric Mammals of Australia and New Guinea 100 million Years of Evolution Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press pp 224pp a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Flannery T F Archer M 1984 The macropodoids Marsupialia of the Early Pliocene Bow local fauna central eastern New South Wales The Australian Zoologist 21 357 383 Pledge Neville S 1992 The Curramulka local fauna A new late Tertiary fossil assemblage from Yorke Peninsula South Australia The Beagle Occasional Papers of the Northern Territory Museum of Arts and Sciences 9 115 142 Naish Darren 2004 Of koalas and marsupial lions the vombatiform radiation part I Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 33 1 240 250 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2004 05 004 PMID 15324852 Retrieved 17 October 2014 Black Karen Price Gilbert J Archer Michael Hand Suzanne J 2014 Bearing up well Understanding the past present and future of Australia s koalas Gondwana Research 25 3 1186 201 Bibcode 2014GondR 25 1186B doi 10 1016 j gr 2013 12 008 a b Black K H Archer M Hand S J Godthelp H 2012 The Rise of Australian Marsupials A Synopsis of Biostratigraphic Phylogenetic Palaeoecologic and Palaeobiogeographic Understanding In Talent J A ed Earth and Life Springer Verlag pp 1040 1047 doi 10 1007 978 90 481 3428 1 35 ISBN 978 90 481 3427 4 Gillespie Anna K Archer Michael Hand Suzanne J 2016 A tiny new marsupial lion Marsupialia Thylacoleonidae from the early Miocene of Australia Palaeontologia Electronica 19 2 doi 10 26879 632 Gillespie Anna K Archer Michael Hand Suzanne J 2019 09 03 Lekaneleo a new genus of marsupial lion Marsupialia Thylacoleonidae from the Oligocene Miocene of Australia and the craniodental morphology of L roskellyae comb nov Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 39 5 e1703722 doi 10 1080 02724634 2019 1703722 ISSN 0272 4634 a b Wroe S Myers T J Wells R T Gillespie A 1999 Estimating the weight of the Pleistocene marsupial lion Thylacoleo carnifex Thylacoleonidae 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Thylacoleo carnifex Diprotodontia Thylacoleonidae from the Pleistocene of Australia Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 29 4 1335 1340 Bibcode 2009JVPal 29 1335W doi 10 1671 039 029 0424 S2CID 86460654 a b c Discovery and Interpretation Natural Worlds Retrieved 7 May 2019 Switek Brian 31 August 2007 Thylacoleo carnifex ancient Australia s marsupial lion Laelaps Retrieved 8 May 2019 a b c d e Figueirido Borja Martin Serra Alberto Janis Christine M 2016 Ecomorphological determinations in the absence of living analogues The predatory behavior of the marsupial lion Thylacoleo carnifex as revealed by elbow joint morphology PDF Paleobiology 42 3 508 531 Bibcode 2016Pbio 42 508F doi 10 1017 pab 2015 55 S2CID 87168573 Extinct Marsupial Lion Tops African Lion In Fight To Death Science Daily 17 January 2008 Dayton Leigh 18 January 2008 Marsupial lion was fast killer The Australian Archived from the original on 17 April 2009 Wells R T Murray P F Bourne S J 2009 Pedal morphology of the marsupial 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the Royal Society of London 149 309 322 1859 doi 10 1098 rstl 1859 0016 S2CID 110651400 a b Switek Brian Thylacoleo Herbivore or Carnivore Wired a b XV On the affinities of thylacoleo Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London 174 575 582 1883 doi 10 1098 rstl 1883 0015 ISSN 0261 0523 S2CID 111347165 a b c Horton D R Wright R V S 1981 Cuts on Lancefield Bones Carnivorous Thylacoleo Not Humans the Cause Archaeology in Oceania 16 2 73 80 doi 10 1002 j 1834 4453 1981 tb00009 x JSTOR 40386545 De Vis C W 1883 On tooth marked bones of extinct marsupials Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales 8 187 190 doi 10 5962 bhl part 28646 Anderson C 1929 Palaeontological notes no 1 Macropus titan Owen and Thylacoleo carnifex Owen Records of the Australian Museum 17 35 49 doi 10 3853 j 0067 1975 17 1929 752 Monbiot George 2014 04 03 Like a demon in a medieval book is this how the marsupial lion killed prey The Guardian Retrieved 22 October 2014 Marsupial lion could climb trees BBC News 2016 02 15 Western Australian Museum Thylacoleo panel 3 Archived 2008 07 27 at the Wayback Machine at Western Australian Museum Tyndale Biscoe Hugh 2005 Life of marsupials Collingwood Vic CSIRO ISBN 978 0 643 09220 4 page needed a b Thylacoleo The Beast of the Nullarbor Catalyst Western Australian Museum Storyteller Media Group and ABC TV 17 August 2006 Monbiot George 2014 04 03 Like a demon in a medieval book Is this how the marsupial lion killed prey The Guardian Murray P Megirian D 1990 Further observations on the morphology of Wakaleo vanderleueri Marsupialia Thylacoleonidae from the mid Miocene Camfield beds Northern Territory The Beagle Occasional Papers of the Northern Territory Museum of Arts and Sciences 7 1 91 102 Humans killed off Australia s giant beasts BBC News 24 March 2012 Ritchie Euan G Johnson Christopher N 2009 Predator interactions mesopredator release and biodiversity conservation Ecology Letters 12 9 982 98 doi 10 1111 j 1461 0248 2009 01347 x hdl 10536 DRO DU 30039763 PMID 19614756 Climate change frames debate over the extinction of megafauna in Sahul Pleistocene Australia New Guinea PDF Humans killed off Australia s giant beasts BBC 24 March 2012 Retrieved 7 May 2019 Ritchie Euan G Johnson Christopher N 2009 09 01 Predator interactions mesopredator release and biodiversity conservation Ecology Letters 12 9 982 998 doi 10 1111 j 1461 0248 2009 01347 x hdl 10536 DRO DU 30039763 ISSN 1461 0248 PMID 19614756 Caverns give up huge fossil haul BBC News 25 January 2007 Australian Cave Yields Giant Animal Fossils Archived from the original on 2009 05 24 Retrieved 2009 09 03 Welch David M June 2015 Thy Thylacoleo is a thylacine Australian Archaeology 80 1 40 47 doi 10 1080 03122417 2015 11682043 ISSN 0312 2417 S2CID 146358676 Akerman Kim Willing Tim March 2009 An ancient rock painting of a marsupial lion Thylacoleo carnifex from the Kimberley Western Australia Antiquity Retrieved 11 December 2012 Akerman Kim December 2009 Interaction between humans and megafauna depicted in Australian rock art Antiquity Retrieved 11 December 2012 Musser Anne 29 November 2018 Thylacoleo carnifex Australian Museum Retrieved 7 May 2019 Camens Aaron Bruce Carey Stephen Paul 2013 01 02 Contemporaneous Trace and Body Fossils from a Late Pleistocene Lakebed in Victoria Australia Allow Assessment of Bias in the Fossil Record PLOS ONE 8 1 e52957 Bibcode 2013PLoSO 852957C doi 10 1371 journal pone 0052957 PMC 3534647 PMID 23301008 IV On the fossil mammals of Australia Part II Description of an almost entire skull of the thylacoleo carnifex Owen from a freshwater deposit Darling Downs Queensland Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London 156 73 82 1866 doi 10 1098 rstl 1866 0004 S2CID 110169146 External links edit nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Thylacoleo New study finds no evidence for theory humans wiped out megafauna Thylacoleo Australia s Marsupial Lion Thylacoleo in Pleistocene Australia Steve Wroe s Web Page Australian Megafauna Western Australian Museum Thylacoleo a voracious hunter PLEDGE N 1977 A NEW SPECIES OF THYLACOLEO MARSUPIALIA THYLACOLEONIDAE WITH NOTES ON THE OCCURRENCES AND DISTRIBUTION OF THYLACOLEONIDAE IN SOUTH AUSTRALIA permanent dead link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Thylacoleo amp oldid 1188797172, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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