Lutrinae Bonaparte, 1838 (Carnivora, Mustelidae) from the Plio-Pleistocene of the Lower Omo Valley, southwestern Ethiopia: systematics and new insights into the paleoecology and paleobiogeography of the Turkana otters
Authors/Creators
- 1. Laboratory Paleontology Evolution Paleoecosystems Paleoprimatology (PALEVOPRIM, UMR 7262 CNRS INEE), University of Poitiers, 6 rue Michel Brunet, 86073 Poitiers (France)
- 2. Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University, Palisades, New York, 10025 (United States)
- 3. Laboratory Paleontology Evolution Paleoecosystems Paleoprimatology (PALEVOPRIM, UMR 7262 CNRS INEE), University of Poitiers, 6 rue Michel Brunet, 86073 Poitiers (France) and Centre Français des Études Éthiopiennes (CFEE, USR 3137 CNRS), Ministry of Europe and Foreign Affairs, Embassy of France to Ethiopia, PO BOX 5554 Addis Ababa (Ethiopia)
Description
We describe otter remains (Lutrinae Bonaparte, 1838) from the Plio-Pleistocene of the Lower Omo Valley of southwestern Ethiopia. We report isolated lower and upper teeth of Torolutra sp. dated to c. 3.3 Ma, dental specimens and a femur of Enhydriodon Falconer, 1868, attributed to a new species, dated between c. 3.4 Ma and 2.5 Ma, as well as a humerus of Lutrinae indet. dated between c. 1.9 Ma and 1.8 Ma. The new species Enhydriodon omoensis n. sp. is the largest species of the genus discovered so far. It is even larger than its close relative E. dikikae Geraads, Alemseged, Bobe & Reed, 2011, a Pliocene lion-sized otter from the Afar region and potentially from eastern Turkana. Based on stable oxygen and carbon isotope analyses, we found that Enhydriodon from the Lower Omo Valley could have been terrestrial and fed on both aquatic and terrestrial prey, acquired by either hunting or scavenging. It filled a unique ecological niche in the past communities co-existing with australopithecines. Enhydriodon and Torolutra Petter, Pickford & Howell, 1991 went extinct in Africa around the Plio-Pleistocene transition, along with many large-sized and ecologically specialized carnivorans. This extinction event could be linked to the many geological, climate, and biotic changes occurring in the eastern African rift during this period, notably the incursion of early hominins into the carnivore guild.
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comptes-rendus-palevol2022v21a30-pdfa.pdf
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