Published July 31, 2009 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Potwarmus primitivus

Description

POTWARMUS PRIMITIVUS (WESSELS ET AL., 1982)

Synonym: Potwarmus minimus Lindsay, 1988.

Wessels et al. (1982) erected the new species Antemus primitivus on the basis of eight complete and seven incomplete isolated cheek teeth from the Chinji Formation (near Banda Daud Shah), Pakistan. They assigned this taxon to the genus Antemus. Later, Jacobs et al. (1989) excluded this species from the genus Antemus because it has a single lingual cusp on the M1 (the enterostyle), whereas A. chinjiensis (type species of the genus) has two (an isolated enterostyle and an anterostyle, t1, connected to the lingual anterocone, t2). The reassessment conducted by Jacobs et al. (1989), then in press, together with the study of additional material from the Middle Miocene Pakistani localities YGSP 589, YGSP 709 (Chinji Formation) and YGSP 591 and YGSP 592 (Kamlial Formation), motivated Lindsay (1988) to re-allocate A. primitivus to the new genus Potwarmus, an action with which I agree. Lindsay (1988) also erected a new species of Potwarmus, P. minimus, the holotype being an isolated left m1 (YGSP 19555) from the Middle Miocene locality YGSP 589 (Chinji Formation, Potwar Plateau, Pakistan) (Lindsay, 1988: pl. 10, fig. l). This species was said to be also recorded in Pakistan, in the Middle Miocene locality YGSP 642 in the Kamlial Formation and, possibly, in some HGSP localities in the Chinji Formation at Banda Daud Shah (Lindsay, 1988). However, based on analysis of a larger sample from a single locality, Lindsay (1994) synonymized P. primitivus and P. minimus. Incidentally, Lindsay (1994: table 1) listed P. primitivus in the Kamlial Formation of Pakistan, but also in the Manchar Formation and not in the Chinji Formation.

The holotype of this species (H-GSP 5521) is a right M1 from Chinji locality H-GSP 107, which is possibly Middle Miocene in age (Wessels et al., 1982). The morphology of the first lower molar of Potwarmus primitivus is very distinct from P. flynni sp. nov. The m1s of P. primitivus have an unreduced anterior portion: they have a distinct single anteroconid and a metaconid, which are not distinct in P. flynni sp. nov. Potwarmus primitivus has a larger enterostyle and a better developed longitudinal crest on the M1s than AJ7. On the M2s of P. primitivus, the longitudinal crest is also better developed than in the Arabian specimens and, the strong, long lingual branch of the anterior cingulum descends lingually continuing posteriorly as a prominent lingual cingulum. In contrast, these cingula are less prominent, much shorter and not in continuity both in AJ11 and AJ12. In addition, the hypocone joins with the metacone more anteriorly on the M2 of P. primitivus than in P. flynni sp. nov.

Notes

Published as part of Antoñanzas, Raquel López, 2009, First Potwarmus from the Miocene of Saudi Arabia and the early phylogeny of murines (Rodentia: Muroidea), pp. 664-679 in Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 156 (3) on page 668, DOI: 10.1111/j.1096-3642.2008.00494.x, http://zenodo.org/record/4687752

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Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Family
Muridae
Genus
Potwarmus
Kingdom
Animalia
Order
Rodentia
Phylum
Chordata
Species
primitivus
Taxon rank
species

References

  • Lindsay EH. 1988. Cricetid rodents from the Siwalik deposits near Chinji Village. Part I: Megacricetodontinae, Myocricetodontinae, and Dendromurinae. Palaeovertebrata 18: 95 - 154.
  • Wessels W, de Bruijn H, Hussain ST, Leinders J. 1982. Fossil rodents from the Chinji Formation, Banda Daud Shah, Kohat, Pakistan. Koninklijke Nederlandse Akademie van Wetenschappen Proceedings, Series B 85: 337 - 364.
  • Jacobs LL, Flynn LJ, Downs WR, Barry JC. 1989. Neogene rodents of southern Asia. In: Black CC, Dawson MR, eds. Papers on fossil rodents in honor of Albert Elmer Wood. Los Angeles, CA: Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County, 157 - 177.
  • Lindsay EH. 1994. The evolution of murine rodents in Asia. National Science Museum Monographs 8: 131 - 147.