Tuesday 28 October 2014

Ancient Proboscideans – Extinct Elephants and their kindred.



Proboscidea is the order of mammals with trunks, and their more primitive relatives with “proto-trunks”. Today the only living members of this order are in the family Elephantidae, the living Asian, African savannah and forest elephants. These are magnificent megafauna in themselves, treasures of any zoo which has them, butchered for their incisors and occasionally used in human warfare. But there is much more to Proboscidea than the living elephants as this order has a total of around 164 mostly extinct species, which diversified into all sorts of bizarre forms, such as the four tusked deinotheres and the shovel-tusked Platybelodon. These fantastical, mighty beasts are only known to us through the fossil record. It is tempting to compare the largest Proboscideans, to the herbivorous dinosaurs, especially the sauropods, as they fill the niche for large browsing animal. I have no chance of discussing all these species here, but I will mention some of the most outlandish and interesting Proboscideans less familiar to us than elephants and mammoths.

Animals with 3m long teeth don't drop out of the sky, they as an order have a history stretching back into the Paleocene, starting with an apparently humble creature the size of a rabbit. The evolutionary process basically involves a gradual increase in body size, growth of tusks and size of head. The heavy tusked head could not be supported by a long neck, and as their legs were long they could not reach the ground with their mouth to eat and drink. This problem was “solved” by the elongation of the muscular nasal cavity, forming a trunk. These processes were not so smooth and continuous, and the journey had many turns from this path.


A reconstruction of Eritherium.

One of the earliest Proboscidean is Eritherium which lived 60 million years ago, the remains of this creature was first found in phosphate deposits in Morocco in 2012. The Eritherium remains show no sign of a trunk, which is formed by the evolutionary fusion of upper lip and nostril, which would be evident in an enlarged naval cavity. It is a Proboscidean without a proboscis, but probably had a very mobile upper lip, a little like the unrelated tapirs. So what makes this animal a Proboscidean? A number of features which were elaborated in later Proboscideans are present in Eritherium, including enlarged incisors, which would eventually sprout forth to create tusks, and simple lophodont molars (molars with ridges perpendicular to the jaw line). It was 5kg in weight, but this outweighs most other Paleocene mammals, many of which were decided shrew-like. Eritherium was probably somewhat aquatic, like many of the Proboscideans including the swamp dwelling American Mastodon and modern elephants who use their trunks as “snorkels” in order to swim up to 48km offshore. It is likely that the common ancestor of Proboscideans, Sirenians (sea cows) and the extinct Desmostylia were fully aquatic.


A reconstruction of Phiomia

A later group of Proboscideans is Phiomia, a direct relative of modern elephants, which lived between 35 and 25 million years ago. This was a larger animal, 2m high at the shoulder. Remains show evidence of a short rudimentary trunk (based on the larger nasal cavity) and enlarged incisors on the lower and upper jaws, meaning it had two pairs of tusks. Tusks are simply enlarged incisors, about a third of it's length, the pulp cavity, is embedded in the skull. The visible tusk is the ivory made of dentine covered by enamel. After it has shed it's milk tusks a Proboscidean maintains and grows it's tusks throughout it's life. In observed species the male has the longest tusks, as befitting their primary use in fighting, but they are and were also used to strip bark, defend from predators and in species like the woolly mammoth they may have been used to break up ice to find food.


A skull of Deinotherium at the Natural History Museum

The branches of evolutionary tree which did not lead to elephants contain more baroque Proboscideans, including two groups which lived at approximately the same time, Deinotherium and Platybelodon. The skull of Deinotherium is a disturbing thing to bump into in a museum, no doubt horrifying for an ancient person, with no ideas about deep time, to find in the wild. The skull appears to have two horns curved backwards out of it's chin, like a demonic beard presumably used for gouging. If an ancient person who expects all animals to have forward facing eyes like they do, sees the enlarged nasal cavity at the front of the skull, it could be mistaken for the skull of a monster. Indeed, the ancient myths of the Cyclops could be inspired by the discovery of Proboscidean fossils in Greece. Deinotherium itself lost it's upper pair of tusks and maintained the lower tusks (the opposite of modern elephants). As you can tell from a reconstruction of these creatures, the lower tusks hid quite discretely under the trunk which filled the nasal cavity at the front of the animals head, making it look less horrifying. They were quite primitive, lacking the sequential teeth eruption of later Proboscideans.

The skull of Deinotherium is a disturbing thing to bump into in a museum and no doubt horrifying for an ancient person, with no ideas about deep time, to find in the wild. The skull appears to have two horns curved backwards from it chin, like a monstrous beard, used for gouging. Indeed, the ancient myths of the Cyclops could be inspired by the discovery of Proboscidean fossils in Greece, due to the fused external naris resembling an eye socket. Even the name Deinotherium is from the Greek for “terrible beast”. In reality, Deinotherium lost it's upper tusks and maintained it's lower tusks (the opposite of modern elephants), and probably used these curved tusks to scrap bark from tree. The lower tusks would have hid quite discretely under the trunk which extended from the external naris, making it look less horrifying.


A reconstruction of Platybelodon

Platybelodon is in the same family as Gomphotherium and is not a direct ancestor of elephants. It lived about 20 – 8 million years ago and retained all four tusks. The lower tusks flattened out so the each tusk met and formed a sort of “shovel” shape with a deep scoop at the end, which only developed in adulthood. There is speculation about the use of it's tusks. It was originally thought that it they used their “shovel” to scoop through the mud to collect plants; a semi-aquatic lifestyle familiar to Proboscideans. The two lower tusks end with a V-shaped sharpened tip, analysis of the pattern of wear suggests they were used in a scythe-like manner to cut down branches and to strip bark from trees. Palaeontologists removed them from their presumed habitat of lake-side bogs and place them in a more arboreal habitat. The shovel tusks were an adaptation to a crowding niche, as with several genera of Proboscidean in this area at the time, Platybeldon had to specialise to survive.


A reconstruction of Gomphotherium

Another key part of the future elephant physiology was put in place in another of the elephants' direct ancestors, Gomphotherium, living from 20 to 15 million years ago. They retained the four tusks, with the lower tusks being slightly flattened, and show a basic form of sequential tooth development. This is when, due to the stresses caused by eating grasses containing silicon particles, a tooth erupts from behind the existing teeth to replace the one which had eroded at the front. The erupted tooth would be larger than the previous ones, therefore allowing the jaw to continue to grow throughout the animals life. Gomphotherium probably had three teeth in each side of it's jaw, but later species had only one tooth in each side of the jaw. Gomphotherium was a member of the well travelled family Gomphothere, which includes the genera Cuvieronius and Stegomastodon, some species of which travelled as far as South America.


A sketch of American Mastodon Molars, my work

Mastodons were, despite their common confusion with mammoths, very different animals, Mastodons diverged from the line that would lead to elephants after Phiomia, separating them from mammoths by about 20 million years of evolution. The earliest Mastodons were the Losodokodon which lived from 27 to 24 million years ago in East Africa, later radiating throughout Europe, Asia and North America. The most famous Mastodon species is the American Mastodon, whose genus Mammut arrived in North America 11 million years ago. The American Mastodon was around 2.7 metres at the shoulder, small compared to the neighbouring Columbian Mammoth. It was quite stocky with a deep chest and probably quite muscular. It's tusks were up to 2.5 metres long in adult males and curved upwards and slightly outwards, less elaborate than tusks of mammoth. The name Mastodon means “breast tooth”, showing the lumpy nature of their molars. Elephant and mammoth molars are relatively flat and ridged, whereas mastodon molars have rounded cusps, which caused early naturalists to speculate that they were terrifying beasts who caught prey with their tusks. The reason each of these groups have significantly different teeth is because they were used to eat different foods, none of these animal foods. Mastodon teeth were used to crush leaves and twigs in forests, whereas mammoths grazed grassland.


My drawing of a cave painting of a woolly mammoth

The genus believed to be the ancestors of modern elephants and mammoths is Primelephas. These creatures had four tusks, though these were smaller than in Gomphotherium. This is because Primelephus did not need them to shovel though the mud, it had moved to a grassland habitat similar to modern elephants on the savannah or mammoths on the steppe. This genus split into three genera, Loxodonta (African elephants), Elephus (Asian elephants) and Mammuthus (mammoths). Mammuthus belongs to the Elephantidae family, making it as much of an elephant as Loxodonta and Elephus.


Bibliography




Understanding proboscidean evolution: a formidable task- Jeheskel Shoshani www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0169534798014918

I found the exhibition Mammoths: Ice Age Giants at the Natural History Museum very informative, as well as the book of the same name by Adrian Lister.



This was an entry to Rockwatch's Young Writer 2014 competition. 


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