Morphology and phylogenetic relationships of the earliest known hippopotamids (Cetartiodactyla, Hippopotamidae, Kenyapotaminae)
Author
Boisserie, Jean-Renaud
Author
Lihoreau, Fabrice
Author
Orliac, Maeva
Author
Fisher, Rebecca E.
Author
Weston, Eleanor M.
Author
Ducrocq, Stéphane
text
Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society
2010
2010-10-28
158
2
325
366
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1096-3642.2009.00548.x
journal article
10.1111/j.1096-3642.2009.00548.x
0024-4082
5438148
KENYAPOTAMINAE AND EARLIEST
HIPPOPOTAMINAE
: AN AFRICAN HISTORY
The known first 6 000 000 years of hippopotamid evolution was restricted to a limited portion of eastern Africa (
Fig. 11
). It is tempting to find some explanations for this situation beyond fossil record perfect- ibility.
Hippopotaminae
are characterized by a semiaquatic way of life constraining their dispersal abilities, arid areas being insurmountable barriers for them (
Jablonski, 2003
). If
Kenyapotaminae
displayed a similar ecology, the phase of aridification experienced by Africa after 15 Mya (
Zachos
et al.
, 2001
) could be viewed as a factor limiting the distribution of the earliest hippopotamids (see also
Boisserie & Lihoreau, 2006
). Similarly, the later extension of kenyapotamines to central northern Africa (
Fig. 11
) should indicate the continuity of wet habitats within a ‘Trans-Saharan’ biogeographical province around 10 Mya. This scenario is supported by other data, notably on the semiaquatic
Libycosaurus
(
Lihoreau
et al.
, 2006
)
.
Figure 11.
Biogeographical background and evolutionary scenarios for the emergence of
Kenyapotamus
and
Hippopotaminae
. Abbreviations: 1 and 2, see text for comments; archaic bothrio., archaic bothriodontines (excluding
Brachyodus
); Pleis., Pleistocene;
Siva
. –
Afro
., group of advanced bothriodontines including the African
Afromeryx
and the Afro-Asian
Sivameryx
. Maps indicate known distribution areas of taxa at approximate regional scale. Distributions for:
Libycosaurus
from
Lihoreau
et al.
(2006)
and
Boisserie & Lihoreau (2006)
;
Merycopotamus
from Lihoreau
et al.
(2007);
Sivameryx
–
Afromeryx
from
Lihoreau (2003)
;
Elomeryx
from
Ducrocq & Lihoreau (2006)
; archaic bothriodontines from Ducrocq (1997).
Unfortunately, the ecology of kenyapotamines remains largely unknown. To date, the most reliable data come from analyses of enamel stable isotopic content performed by
Harris
et al.
(2008)
on some late Miocene kenyapotamine specimens. They notably show that the
18
O/
16
O ratio, a parameter complexly linked to water dynamics in habitats and diets, is not significantly different in kenyapotamines and hippopotamines. This suggests similar semiaquatic habits in both subfamilies, but it is not possible to conclude firmly without comparing these stable isotope results with more general ones obtained for the complete faunas including
Kenyapotamus
.
The last known remains of
Kenyapotamus
predate the ‘hippopotamine event’. This event corresponds to the sudden appearance around 7.5 Mya of particularly abundant, fully evolved hippopotamines dominating local wet ecosystems in the Arabo-eastern African and northern central African fossil records (Boisserie, 2006; Weston & Boisserie, in press). This event may be an artefact of incomplete fossil records, the result of a punctuated equilibrium, a dramatic increase of hippopotamine abundance in relation to environmental changes, or a combination of these effects. Earliest known hippopotamines represented a considerable biomass in depositional environments, were relatively diversified, and were characterized by a distribution extended at least to the northern half of the continent. These elements seem in favour of an emergence of ‘true’ hippopotamines well before the ‘hippopotamine event’. Morphology tends to support this view: late Miocene kenyapotamines seem indeed a less suitable stem group for
Hippopotaminae
than middle Miocene ones, suggesting a deeper hippopotamine evolutionary history. Resolution of this question will probably come from new discoveries, either of a form transitional between
K. coryndonae
and late Miocene hippopotamines, or, more likely in our opinion, of a hippopotamine lineage contemporary to the late Miocene
Kenyapotamus
.
Expansion of
Hippopotamidae
outside Africa is recorded only at the terminal Miocene, after the ‘hippopotamine event’, to southern Europe and southern Asia (
Fig. 11
). Maximal distribution of the family was reached during the Pleistocene, with Pan-African distribution, presence of
Hippopotamus
in western to south-eastern European and south-western Asia, and extension of
Hexaprotodon
from southern Asia to south-eastern Asia (
Kahlke, 1990
;
Boisserie, 2007
). It would be important to look for Mio-Pliocene hippopotamid remains in south-western Asia in order to complete the biogeographical history of the family.