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Published online on April 14, 2008, 10.1073/pnas.0800884105

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EVOLUTION
Stable isotope evidence for an amphibious phase in early proboscidean evolution

Alexander G. S. C. Liu*,{dagger}, Erik R. Seiffert{ddagger}, and Elwyn L. Simons{dagger},§

*Department of Earth Sciences, University of Oxford, Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3PR, United Kingdom; {ddagger}Department of Anatomical Sciences, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, NY 11794-8081; and §Division of Fossil Primates, Duke Lemur Center, 1013 Broad Street, Durham, NC 27705

Contributed by Elwyn L. Simons, February 7, 2008 (sent for review December 19, 2007)

Abstract

The order Proboscidea includes extant elephants and their extinct relatives and is closely related to the aquatic sirenians (manatees and dugongs) and terrestrial hyracoids (hyraxes). Some analyses of embryological, morphological, and paleontological data suggest that proboscideans and sirenians shared an aquatic or semiaquatic common ancestor, but independent tests of this hypothesis have proven elusive. Here we test the hypothesis of an aquatic ancestry for advanced proboscideans by measuring {delta}18O in tooth enamel of two late Eocene proboscidean genera, Barytherium and Moeritherium, which are sister taxa of Oligocene-to-Recent proboscideans. The combination of low {delta}18O values and low {delta}18O standard deviations in Barytherium and Moeritherium matches the isotopic pattern seen in aquatic and semiaquatic mammals, and differs from that of terrestrial mammals. {delta}13C values of these early proboscideans suggest that both genera are likely to have consumed freshwater plants, although a component of C3 terrestrial vegetation cannot be ruled out. The simplest explanation for the combined evidence from isotopes, dental functional morphology, and depositional environments is that Barytherium and Moeritherium were at least semiaquatic and lived in freshwater swamp or riverine environments, where they grazed on freshwater vegetation. These results lend new support to the hypothesis that Oligocene-to-Recent proboscideans are derived from amphibious ancestors.

Barytherium | Eocene | Fayum | Moeritherium | Proboscidea


Footnotes

Author contributions: A.G.S.C.L., E.R.S., and E.L.S. designed research; A.G.S.C.L. performed research; A.G.S.C.L. analyzed data; and A.G.S.C.L. and E.R.S. wrote the paper.

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

{dagger}To whom correspondence may be addressed. E-mail: alexl{at}earth.ox.ac.uk or esimons{at}duke.edu

© 2008 by The National Academy of Sciences of the USA


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