The Herald (South Africa)

Wolverine size of leopard roamed SA’s west coast

- Tanya Farber

A wolverine the size of a leopard sounds like a mythical creature, or perhaps something created by Pixar for its next animation.

But this is reality — scientists in Cape Town have discovered that such a creature was living along our west coast about five million years ago.

Equally as intriguing, an otter the size of a wolf is thought to have been roaming that same stretch of land at the time. The otter, classified as

Sivaonyx hendeyi, and the wolverine, classified as Plesiogulo aff. Monspesula­nus,

were recently discovered by scientists at the University of Cape Town (UCT) and Iziko Museums of SA.

Dr Alberto Valenciano (Iziko) and Romala Govender (UCT) were researchin­g a collection of fossils — from the West Coast Fossil Park near Langebaanw­eg — that have been housed by Iziko since they were excavated between the 1960s and 1980s.

The fossils they have described are just a few among thousands not yet described in the collection.

Both creatures are mustelids, which is a family of carnivorou­s mammals that includes weasels, badgers and ferrets, and the new paper (recently published in life sciences journal PeerJ) describes the teeth, forelimb and hindlimb skeletons of the species.

This is the first time in more than four decades that new specimens of mustelids from the West Coast Fossil Park near

Langebaanw­eg have been identified.

“Our work has led to important new data about the locomotion and diet of the rather poorly known giant otter that is unique to Langebaanw­eg,” Valenciano said.

The area is home to an array of ancient carnivores, including 20 species of mustelids, bears, seals, jackals, hyenas, sabretooth cats, giant civets and mongoose.

Between about two- and four-million years ago, other species of giant otters evolved in Africa, and some of them came to be about the size of modern black bears.

“This group of giant otters are all extinct, and their new fossils enable us to unravel their biology and evolutiona­ry relationsh­ips,” Valenciano said.

Though Valenciano and Govender found the Langebaanw­eg wolverine to be about the size of a leopard, wolverines today are much smaller — not much bigger than a medium-sized dog.

Five-million years ago, wolverines lived across the world. Today they are limited to remote forests and tundra in the northern hemisphere.

“I am thrilled to hear about these five million-year-old giant mustelids that lived on the west coast of South Africa,” UCT palaeobiol­ogist Prof Anusuya Chinsamy-Turan, who was not involved in the study, said.

“This work highlights that although it is important to unearth new fossils, it is essential that existing collection­s in museums be actively researched.”

 ?? Picture: MAGGIE NEWMAN/UNIVERSITY OF THE WITWATERSR­AND ?? TIME WARP: A comparison of the upper jaw bones of the ancient, giant otter from Langebaanw­eg, left, and the living African clawless otter, right, showing the difference in size
Picture: MAGGIE NEWMAN/UNIVERSITY OF THE WITWATERSR­AND TIME WARP: A comparison of the upper jaw bones of the ancient, giant otter from Langebaanw­eg, left, and the living African clawless otter, right, showing the difference in size

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