Silvaroo bandharr

Prideaux, Gavin J. & Warburton, Natalie M., 2023, A review of the late Cenozoic genus Bohra (Diprotodontia: Macropodidae) and the evolution of tree-kangaroos, Zootaxa 5299 (1), pp. 1-95 : 31

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5299.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:9CA85AEC-7128-4118-A50D-FCD16502F5E0

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8017934

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C24E22-F607-5616-FF01-C139C68AF7FD

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Silvaroo bandharr
status

 

Bohra sp. cf. B. bandharr

cf. Dendrolagus sp. 1 : Flannery & Archer (1984), pp. 358–359, 361–362, figure 1F–G, table 1. Rich (1991), p. 1049.

cf. Dendrolagus sp. 2 : Flannery & Archer (1984), pp. 358–359, 362–363, figure 1F–G, table 1. Rich (1991), p. 1049. Tedford et al. (1992), p. 187.

cf. Dendrolagus: Tedford et al. (1992) View in CoL , p. 190, table 3; partim.

Protemnodon?cf. bandharr: Dawson et al. (1999) , pp. 281, 287, table 10.

Dendrolagus sp. 2 : Dawson et al. (1999), p. 281.

Dendrolagus sp. : Dawson (2004a), pp. 267, 270–272, table 1; partim.

Silvaroo sp. indet. 1: Dawson (2004b), pp. 283, 286, figure 3.

Silvaroo sp. 1 : Dawson (2004b), p. 288, table 2.

Dendrolagus sp. indet.: Prideaux & Warburton (2008), pp. 463–464, figure 1; partim. Silvaroo sp. : Louys & Price (2015), pp. 565, 567, 569, figure 8N.

Referred specimens. Chinchilla Rifle Range (site not specified), Queensland. QM F43281, partial right adult dentary (preserving m3–4). QM F58665, partial right adult dentary (preserving m3–4); QM F61040, right i1. Collected by Doris and Cecil Wilkinson.

Probably Chinchilla. QM F4750, partial right adult dentary (preserving incomplete p3, m1–4). This specimen retains no associated locality information. Chinchilla Sand is suggested by preservation (chocolate-brown bone, blue-grey enamel and yellow- to orange- to chocolate-brown adhering matrix), which has been used to retrospectively, albeit tentatively, differentiate Chinchilla Sand specimens from other Darling Downs material (e.g., Bartholomai 1963, 1975; Bartholomai & Woods 1976; Louys & Price 2015). Collection details are unknown, but it was very likely collected in the late 19 th century. The specimen was ascribed the number 8808 in De Vis’s catalogue.

Bow, New South Wales. AM F59576, partial right adult maxilla (preserving M2–3); AM F64004, posterior half of left P3; AM F64007, right M4; AM F64075, partial left maxilla (preserving very worn M2–4). AM F64245, left M4.

Fisherman’s Cliff, Warrananga Station, New South Wales. NMV P38267, left M2; MNV P38351, left M3 metaloph; NMV P38325, right p3. Collected by Edmund Gill and others in the late 1960s or James Warren and others in the early 1970s.

FUPS Quarry, Bone Gulch, Moorna Station , New South Wales . NMV P257273 View Materials , partial left P3 ; NMV P257274 View Materials , left M3 ; NMV P257275 View Materials , right M1 metaloph. These specimens were picked from concentrate sieved from sediment collected by a team led by GJP. NMV P257273 View Materials was collected on 14 February 2016 , NMV P257274 View Materials on 16 August 2015 , and NMV P257275 View Materials on 15 February 2016 .

Remarks. An assortment of specimens have been grouped under this limbo nomen ( Figure 16–18 View FIGURE 16 View FIGURE 17 View FIGURE 18 ) because they share dentary or cheek-tooth traits with specimens of B. bandharr (e.g., comparatively rectangular upper molars, dentary with a long, rounded postalveolar shelf), but differ by having narrower, much smaller molars ( Table 2 View TABLE 2 ). NMV P38325, by contrast, is a p3 from the early Pleistocene Fisherman’s Cliff LF ( Figure 1 View FIGURE 1 ) referred to B. sp. cf. B. bandharr by association with several loose molars, and the general similarity of its form ( Figure 18J–L View FIGURE 18 ) to that of the only other unworn p3 known for a species of Bohra , that of the paratype of B. illuminata ( Figure 24D View FIGURE 24 ).

The barrier to defining a species from among this collective is the lack, in any one specimen, of sufficient diagnostic attributes that would permit its selection as a reliable holotype. Obtaining further tree-kangaroo fossils from the Chinchilla and Bow localities ( Figure 1 View FIGURE 1 ) may offer the greatest chance of solving this impasse. Nevertheless, although it lacks a name, it would be reasonable to assume that within the sample referred to B. sp. cf. B. bandharr there is yet another late Cenozoic species of Bohra .

QM

Queensland Museum

AM

Australian Museum

NMV

Museum Victoria

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Mammalia

Order

Diprotodontia

Family

Macropodidae

Genus

Silvaroo

Loc

Silvaroo bandharr

Prideaux, Gavin J. & Warburton, Natalie M. 2023
2023
Loc

Silvaroo sp. 1

Dawson L. 2004: 288
2004
Loc

Dendrolagus sp. 2

Dawson, L. & Muirhead, J. & Wroe, S. 1999: 281
1999
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