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Meiolania

Meiolania ("small roamer") is an extinct genus of meiolaniid stem-turtle[2][3] native to Australasia from the Middle Miocene to Late Pleistocene and possibly Holocene. It is best known from fossils found on Lord Howe Island, though fossils are known from mainland Australia, New Caledonia, and possibly Vanuatu and Fiji.[4]

Meiolania
Temporal range: mid Miocene–Holocene
Cast of a Meiolania platyceps skeleton, American Museum of Natural History
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Clade: Pantestudines
Clade: Testudinata
Family: Meiolaniidae
Genus: Meiolania
Owen, 1886[1]
Species
  • Meiolania brevicollis Megirian, 1992
  • Meiolania platyceps Owen, 1886
  • Meiolania mackayi Anderson, 1925
  • ?Meiolania damelipi White, 2010
Synonyms
  • Miolania
  • Ceratochelys

Taxonomy

 
Comparison between the horn cores of a M. platyceps (AM F16866) and M. mackayi (holotype AM Fl7720) specimen

The genus was erected in 1886 based on remains found on Lord Howe Island, which Richard Owen assigned to the two species M. platyceps and M. minor (now a synonym of the former).[1] These were the first good meiolaniid remains, and were used to show that the first known remains of a related animal, a species from Queensland now known as Ninjemys oweni (which was assigned to Meiolania until 1992), did not belong to lizards as initially thought, but to turtles.[5] Woodward sank Niolamia argentina into Meiolania, but this was not accepted by later authors.

The species of the genus may be summarized as

  • Meiolania brevicollis Megirian, 1992
  • Meiolania platyceps Owen, 1886
  • Meiolania mackayi Anderson, 1925

In New Caledonia, M. mackayi was described from Walpole Island in 1925. It was smaller and less robust than M. platyceps.[6] Meiolania remains are also known from the Pindai Caves, Grande Terre, and from Tiga Island. M. brevicollis was described in 1992 from the mid-Miocene Camfield Beds of northern Australia, and differed from M. platyceps in having a flatter skull and other horn proportions.[7]

A second undescribed species of Meiolania from mainland Australia is known from the Wyandotte Creek locality in Queensland, dated to the Late Pleistocene, consisting of three horn cores and a caudal vertebra, noted to be "unusually large" in size. This species is referred to as M. cf platyceps, as the remains are most similar to M. platyceps but are not diagnostic beyond genus level.[8][9]

Holocene remains of turtles from Vanuatu found in Lapita culture middens were referred to Meiolania in 2010 as the new species ?M. damelipi.[10] However, this has been disputed, with other authors stating that the remains appeared to be non-meiolaniiform, and no parietal horns, a distinctive characteristic of Meiolania, have been found at any locality in Vanuatu, despite being one of the most common finds on Walpole and Lord Howe. The long bone morphology agrees more closely with a tortoise identification, a group which has otherwise not been reported from the South Pacific or Australasia.[11][12] Further remains, attributable to ?M. damelipi or a closely related form, have been found in various parts of the Fijian archipelago, including Viti Levu, Vanua Levu, and some smaller islands.[13][14] ?M. damelipi is the yongest species assigned to Meiolania, with the youngest remains dating to around 1000 BCE.[15]

Description

Meiolania had an unusually shaped skull that sported many knob-like and horn-like protrusions. Two large horns faced sideways, and would have prevented the animal fully withdrawing its head into its shell. The tail was protected by armored 'rings', and sported thorn-like spikes at the end.[16] The body form of Meiolania may be viewed as having converged towards those of dinosaurian ankylosaurids and xenarthran glyptodonts.

There are two species of Meiolania known from the Australian continent: M. brevicollis and an unnamed species. The unnamed species could reach 2 metres (6.6 ft) in carapace length, making it the second-largest known terrestrial turtle or tortoise, surpassed only by Megalochelys atlas from Asia, which lived in the Pleistocene.[15] The smallest species in turn was M. mackayi from New Caledonia, with a carapace length of 70 centimetres (2.3 ft). Another insular species is known from Lord Howe Island, M. platyceps. It was a huge turtle, about 100 cm (3.3 ft) in carapace length[15] and probably more than 3 m (9.8 ft) in total body length.[4] Largest specimens of ?M. damelipi had carapaces of 100–135 cm (3.28–4.43 ft) long.[12][15]

Behavior

Meiolania is thought to have fed on plants, and they and other meiolaniids have been generally assumed to be fully terrestrial, though acceptance of this is not universal.[17] Fossil Meiolania eggs have been reported from Lord Howe, assigned to the oogenus Testudoolithus lordhowensis. The eggs are large and spherical, approximately 5.4 cm in diameter, and around 800 μm thick. Like the eggs of modern turtles, they are made of aragonite. The eggs were likely deposited within an excavated hole nest.[18]

Extinction

It is thought that postglacial sea level rise may have contributed to the extinction of M. platyceps on Lord Howe Island, as the area of the current island is much smaller than that exposed during the Pleistocene. They were absent when the islands were first explored by Europeans, who were likely the first humans to discover the islands. The extinction of Meiolania in mainland Australia and in Melanesia has been postulated to be due to human activity.[10][4][12]

Gallery

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Owen, Richard (January 1, 1886). "Description of Fossil Remains of Two Species of a Megalanian Genus (Meiolania) from "Lord Howe's Island"". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society. 177: 471–480. Bibcode:1886RSPT..177..471O. doi:10.1098/rstl.1886.0015.
  2. ^ Joyce, Walter G. (April 2007). "Phylogenetic relationships of Mesozoic turtles" (PDF). Bulletin of the Peabody Museum of Natural History. 48: 3–102. doi:10.3374/0079-032X(2007)48[3:PROMT]2.0.CO;2. S2CID 85998318.
  3. ^ Anquetin, Jérémy (2012) [9 November 2011]. "Reassessment of the phylogenetic interrelationships of basal turtles (Testudinata)". Journal of Systematic Palaeontology. 10: 3–45. doi:10.1080/14772019.2011.558928. S2CID 85295987.
  4. ^ a b c Lauren E. Brown, Don Moll (October 2019). "The enigmatic palaeoecology and palaeobiogeography of the giant, horned, fossil turtles of Australasia: a review and reanalysis of the data". Herpetological Journal. 29 (4): 252–263. doi:10.33256/hj29.4.252263. ISSN 0268-0130. from the original on 18 June 2022.
  5. ^ [1][dead link]
  6. ^ Anderson, C. (1925). "Notes on the extinct Chelonian Meiolania, with a record of a new occurrence" (PDF). Records of the Australian Museum. 14 (4): 223–242. doi:10.3853/j.0067-1975.14.1925.844.
  7. ^ Megirian, D. (1992). "Meiolania brevicollissp. Nov. (Testudines: Meiolaniidae): A new horned turtle from the Australian Miocene". Alcheringa: An Australasian Journal of Palaeontology. 16 (2): 93–106. doi:10.1080/03115519208619035.
  8. ^ G. C. McNamara. 1990. The Wyandotte Local Fauna: A New, Dated, Pleistocene Vertebrate Fauna from Northern Queensland. Memoirs of the Queensland Museum 28:285-297
  9. ^ GAFFNEY, E.S. AND G. MCNAMARA. 1990. A meiolaniid turtle from the Pleistocene of Northern Queensland. Memoirs of the Queensland Museum 28:107–113.
  10. ^ a b White, A. W.; Worthy, T. H.; Hawkins, S.; Bedford, S.; Spriggs, M. (2010-08-16). "Megafaunal meiolaniid horned turtles survived until early human settlement in Vanuatu, Southwest Pacific". Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 107 (35): 15512–15516. Bibcode:2010PNAS..10715512W. doi:10.1073/pnas.1005780107. PMC 2932593. PMID 20713711.
  11. ^ Sterli, Juliana (April 2015). "A Review of the Fossil Record of Gondwanan Turtles of the Clade Meiolaniformes". Bulletin of the Peabody Museum of Natural History. 56 (1): 21–45. doi:10.3374/014.056.0102. ISSN 0079-032X. S2CID 83799914.
  12. ^ a b c James Gibbs, Linda Cayot, Washington Tapia Aguilera (November 7, 2020). Galapagos Giant Tortoises. Elsevier Science. p. 30. ISBN 9780128175552.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  13. ^ Worthy, T. H.; Anderson, A. J.; Molnar, R. E. (1999). "Megafaunal expression in a land without mammals-the first fossil faunas from terrestrial deposits in Fiji (Vertebrata: Amphibia, Reptilia, Aves)". Senckenbergiana Biologica. 79 (2): 237–242. Retrieved 2012-03-04.
  14. ^ Hawkins, Stuart; Worthy, Trevor H.; Bedford, Stuart; Spriggs, Matthew; Clark, Geoffrey; Irwin, Geoff; Best, Simon; Kirch, Patrick (December 2016). "Ancient tortoise hunting in the southwest Pacific". Scientific Reports. 6 (1): 38317. Bibcode:2016NatSR...638317H. doi:10.1038/srep38317. ISSN 2045-2322. PMC 5138842. PMID 27922064.
  15. ^ a b c d Rhodin, Anders G. J.; Thomson, Scott; Georgalis, Georgios L.; Karl, Hans Volker; Danilov, Igor G.; Takahashi, Akio; de la Fuente, Marcelo SaulIcon ; Bourque, Jason; Delfino, Massimo; Bour, Roger; Iverson, John B.; Shaffer, Bradley H.; van Dijk, Peter Paul (2015). "Turtles and Tortoises of the World During the Rise and Global Spread of Humanity: First Checklist and Review of Extinct Pleistocene and Holocene Chelonians" (PDF). Chelonian Research Monographs. 5: 11, 23. doi:10.3854/crm.5.000e.fossil.checklist.v1.2015. ISBN 978-0965354097. ISSN 1088-7105. (PDF) from the original on 21 September 2022.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  16. ^ Palmer, D., ed. (1999). The Marshall Illustrated Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs and Prehistoric Animals. London: Marshall Editions. p. 67. ISBN 1-84028-152-9.
  17. ^ Paulina-Carabajal, Ariana; Sterli, Juliana; Georgi, Justin; Poropat, Stephen F; Kear, Benjamin P (August 2017). "Comparative neuroanatomy of extinct horned turtles (Meiolaniidae) and extant terrestrial turtles (Testudinidae), with comments on the palaeobiological implications of selected endocranial features". Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. 180 (4): 930–950. doi:10.1093/zoolinnean/zlw024. ISSN 0024-4082.
  18. ^ Lawver, Daniel R.; Jackson, Frankie D. (2016-11-01). "A fossil egg clutch from the stem turtle Meiolania platyceps : implications for the evolution of turtle reproductive biology". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 36 (6): e1223685. doi:10.1080/02724634.2016.1223685. ISSN 0272-4634. S2CID 88998996.

Further reading

External links

meiolania, small, roamer, extinct, genus, meiolaniid, stem, turtle, native, australasia, from, middle, miocene, late, pleistocene, possibly, holocene, best, known, from, fossils, found, lord, howe, island, though, fossils, known, from, mainland, australia, cal. Meiolania small roamer is an extinct genus of meiolaniid stem turtle 2 3 native to Australasia from the Middle Miocene to Late Pleistocene and possibly Holocene It is best known from fossils found on Lord Howe Island though fossils are known from mainland Australia New Caledonia and possibly Vanuatu and Fiji 4 MeiolaniaTemporal range mid Miocene Holocene PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg NCast of a Meiolania platyceps skeleton American Museum of Natural HistoryScientific classificationKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass ReptiliaClade PantestudinesClade TestudinataFamily MeiolaniidaeGenus MeiolaniaOwen 1886 1 SpeciesMeiolania brevicollis Megirian 1992Meiolania platyceps Owen 1886Meiolania mackayi Anderson 1925 Meiolania damelipi White 2010SynonymsMiolania Ceratochelys Contents 1 Taxonomy 2 Description 3 Behavior 4 Extinction 5 Gallery 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Further reading 8 External linksTaxonomy Edit Comparison between the horn cores of a M platyceps AM F16866 and M mackayi holotype AM Fl7720 specimen The genus was erected in 1886 based on remains found on Lord Howe Island which Richard Owen assigned to the two species M platyceps and M minor now a synonym of the former 1 These were the first good meiolaniid remains and were used to show that the first known remains of a related animal a species from Queensland now known as Ninjemys oweni which was assigned to Meiolania until 1992 did not belong to lizards as initially thought but to turtles 5 Woodward sank Niolamia argentina into Meiolania but this was not accepted by later authors The species of the genus may be summarized as Meiolania brevicollis Megirian 1992Meiolania platyceps Owen 1886Meiolania mackayi Anderson 1925In New Caledonia M mackayi was described from Walpole Island in 1925 It was smaller and less robust than M platyceps 6 Meiolania remains are also known from the Pindai Caves Grande Terre and from Tiga Island M brevicollis was described in 1992 from the mid Miocene Camfield Beds of northern Australia and differed from M platyceps in having a flatter skull and other horn proportions 7 A second undescribed species of Meiolania from mainland Australia is known from the Wyandotte Creek locality in Queensland dated to the Late Pleistocene consisting of three horn cores and a caudal vertebra noted to be unusually large in size This species is referred to as M cf platyceps as the remains are most similar to M platyceps but are not diagnostic beyond genus level 8 9 Holocene remains of turtles from Vanuatu found in Lapita culture middens were referred to Meiolania in 2010 as the new species M damelipi 10 However this has been disputed with other authors stating that the remains appeared to be non meiolaniiform and no parietal horns a distinctive characteristic of Meiolania have been found at any locality in Vanuatu despite being one of the most common finds on Walpole and Lord Howe The long bone morphology agrees more closely with a tortoise identification a group which has otherwise not been reported from the South Pacific or Australasia 11 12 Further remains attributable to M damelipi or a closely related form have been found in various parts of the Fijian archipelago including Viti Levu Vanua Levu and some smaller islands 13 14 M damelipi is the yongest species assigned to Meiolania with the youngest remains dating to around 1000 BCE 15 Description EditMeiolania had an unusually shaped skull that sported many knob like and horn like protrusions Two large horns faced sideways and would have prevented the animal fully withdrawing its head into its shell The tail was protected by armored rings and sported thorn like spikes at the end 16 The body form of Meiolania may be viewed as having converged towards those of dinosaurian ankylosaurids and xenarthran glyptodonts There are two species of Meiolania known from the Australian continent M brevicollis and an unnamed species The unnamed species could reach 2 metres 6 6 ft in carapace length making it the second largest known terrestrial turtle or tortoise surpassed only by Megalochelys atlas from Asia which lived in the Pleistocene 15 The smallest species in turn was M mackayi from New Caledonia with a carapace length of 70 centimetres 2 3 ft Another insular species is known from Lord Howe Island M platyceps It was a huge turtle about 100 cm 3 3 ft in carapace length 15 and probably more than 3 m 9 8 ft in total body length 4 Largest specimens of M damelipi had carapaces of 100 135 cm 3 28 4 43 ft long 12 15 Behavior EditMeiolania is thought to have fed on plants and they and other meiolaniids have been generally assumed to be fully terrestrial though acceptance of this is not universal 17 Fossil Meiolania eggs have been reported from Lord Howe assigned to the oogenus Testudoolithus lordhowensis The eggs are large and spherical approximately 5 4 cm in diameter and around 800 mm thick Like the eggs of modern turtles they are made of aragonite The eggs were likely deposited within an excavated hole nest 18 Extinction EditIt is thought that postglacial sea level rise may have contributed to the extinction of M platyceps on Lord Howe Island as the area of the current island is much smaller than that exposed during the Pleistocene They were absent when the islands were first explored by Europeans who were likely the first humans to discover the islands The extinction of Meiolania in mainland Australia and in Melanesia has been postulated to be due to human activity 10 4 12 Gallery Edit Front view of M platyceps fossil Lord Howe Island museum The tail of Meiolania platyceps AMNH 29076 Meiolania platyceps Lord Howe Island Maritime Museum The skull of Meiolania platyceps AMNH 29076 See also Edit Paleontology portalBiodiversity of New Caledonia Holocene extinctionReferences Edit a b Owen Richard January 1 1886 Description of Fossil Remains of Two Species of a Megalanian Genus Meiolania from Lord Howe s Island Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society 177 471 480 Bibcode 1886RSPT 177 471O doi 10 1098 rstl 1886 0015 Joyce Walter G April 2007 Phylogenetic relationships of Mesozoic turtles PDF Bulletin of the Peabody Museum of Natural History 48 3 102 doi 10 3374 0079 032X 2007 48 3 PROMT 2 0 CO 2 S2CID 85998318 Anquetin Jeremy 2012 9 November 2011 Reassessment of the phylogenetic interrelationships of basal turtles Testudinata Journal of Systematic Palaeontology 10 3 45 doi 10 1080 14772019 2011 558928 S2CID 85295987 a b c Lauren E Brown Don Moll October 2019 The enigmatic palaeoecology and palaeobiogeography of the giant horned fossil turtles of Australasia a review and reanalysis of the data Herpetological Journal 29 4 252 263 doi 10 33256 hj29 4 252263 ISSN 0268 0130 Archived from the original on 18 June 2022 1 dead link Anderson C 1925 Notes on the extinct Chelonian Meiolania with a record of a new occurrence PDF Records of the Australian Museum 14 4 223 242 doi 10 3853 j 0067 1975 14 1925 844 Megirian D 1992 Meiolania brevicollissp Nov Testudines Meiolaniidae A new horned turtle from the Australian Miocene Alcheringa An Australasian Journal of Palaeontology 16 2 93 106 doi 10 1080 03115519208619035 G C McNamara 1990 The Wyandotte Local Fauna A New Dated Pleistocene Vertebrate Fauna from Northern Queensland Memoirs of the Queensland Museum 28 285 297 GAFFNEY E S AND G MCNAMARA 1990 A meiolaniid turtle from the Pleistocene of Northern Queensland Memoirs of the Queensland Museum 28 107 113 a b White A W Worthy T H Hawkins S Bedford S Spriggs M 2010 08 16 Megafaunal meiolaniid horned turtles survived until early human settlement in Vanuatu Southwest Pacific Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 107 35 15512 15516 Bibcode 2010PNAS 10715512W doi 10 1073 pnas 1005780107 PMC 2932593 PMID 20713711 Sterli Juliana April 2015 A Review of the Fossil Record of Gondwanan Turtles of the Clade Meiolaniformes Bulletin of the Peabody Museum of Natural History 56 1 21 45 doi 10 3374 014 056 0102 ISSN 0079 032X S2CID 83799914 a b c James Gibbs Linda Cayot Washington Tapia Aguilera November 7 2020 Galapagos Giant Tortoises Elsevier Science p 30 ISBN 9780128175552 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Worthy T H Anderson A J Molnar R E 1999 Megafaunal expression in a land without mammals the first fossil faunas from terrestrial deposits in Fiji Vertebrata Amphibia Reptilia Aves Senckenbergiana Biologica 79 2 237 242 Retrieved 2012 03 04 Hawkins Stuart Worthy Trevor H Bedford Stuart Spriggs Matthew Clark Geoffrey Irwin Geoff Best Simon Kirch Patrick December 2016 Ancient tortoise hunting in the southwest Pacific Scientific Reports 6 1 38317 Bibcode 2016NatSR 638317H doi 10 1038 srep38317 ISSN 2045 2322 PMC 5138842 PMID 27922064 a b c d Rhodin Anders G J Thomson Scott Georgalis Georgios L Karl Hans Volker Danilov Igor G Takahashi Akio de la Fuente Marcelo SaulIcon Bourque Jason Delfino Massimo Bour Roger Iverson John B Shaffer Bradley H van Dijk Peter Paul 2015 Turtles and Tortoises of the World During the Rise and Global Spread of Humanity First Checklist and Review of Extinct Pleistocene and Holocene Chelonians PDF Chelonian Research Monographs 5 11 23 doi 10 3854 crm 5 000e fossil checklist v1 2015 ISBN 978 0965354097 ISSN 1088 7105 Archived PDF from the original on 21 September 2022 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Palmer D ed 1999 The Marshall Illustrated Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs and Prehistoric Animals London Marshall Editions p 67 ISBN 1 84028 152 9 Paulina Carabajal Ariana Sterli Juliana Georgi Justin Poropat Stephen F Kear Benjamin P August 2017 Comparative neuroanatomy of extinct horned turtles Meiolaniidae and extant terrestrial turtles Testudinidae with comments on the palaeobiological implications of selected endocranial features Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 180 4 930 950 doi 10 1093 zoolinnean zlw024 ISSN 0024 4082 Lawver Daniel R Jackson Frankie D 2016 11 01 A fossil egg clutch from the stem turtle Meiolania platyceps implications for the evolution of turtle reproductive biology Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 36 6 e1223685 doi 10 1080 02724634 2016 1223685 ISSN 0272 4634 S2CID 88998996 Further reading Edit Cox Barry Harrison Colin Savage R J G Gardiner Brian Palmer Douglas 1999 The Simon amp Schuster Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs and Prehistoric Creatures A Visual Who s Who of Prehistoric Life Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0 684 86411 8 OCLC 40943525 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Meiolania Wikispecies has information related to Meiolania Meiolania platyceps Owen The Australian Museum photo Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Meiolania amp oldid 1135011889, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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