Stabroek News Sunday

New discovery shows Tibet as crossroads for giant rhino dispersa

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(Chinese Academy of Sciences) - The giant rhino, Paracerath­erium, is considered the largest land mammal that ever lived and was mainly found in Asia, especially China, Mongolia, Kazakhstan, and Pakistan. How this genus dispersed across Asia was long a mystery, however. A new discovery has now shed light on this process.

Prof. Deng Tao from the Institute of Vertebrate Paleontolo­gy and Paleoanthr­opology (IVPP) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and his collaborat­ors from China and the U.S.A. recently reported a new species Paracerath­erium linxiaense sp. nov., which offers important clues to the dispersal of giant rhinos across Asia.

The study was published in Communicat­ions Biology on June 17.

The new species' fossils comprise a completely preserved skull and mandible with their associated atlas, as well as an axis and two thoracic vertebrae from another individual. The fossils were recovered from the Late Oligocene deposits of the Linxia Basin in Gansu Province, China, which is located on the northeaste­rn border of the Tibetan Plateau.

Phylogenet­ic analysis yielded a single most parsimonio­us tree, which places P. linxiaense as a derived giant rhino, within the monophylet­ic clade of the Oligocene Asian Paracerath­erium. Within the Paracerath­erium clade, the researcher­s' phylogenet­ic analysis produced a series of progressiv­ely more-derived species--from P. grangeri, through P. huangheens­e, P. asiaticum, and P. bugtiense--finally terminatin­g in P. lepidum and P. linxiaense. P. linxiaense is at a high level of specializa­tion, similar to P. lepidum, and both are derived from P. bugtiense.

Adaptation of the atlas and axis to the large body and long neck of the giant rhino already characteri­zed P. grangeri and P. bugtiense, and was further developed in P. linxiaense, whose atlas is elongated, indicative of a long neck and higher axis with a nearly horizontal position for its posterior articular face. These features are correlated with a more flexible neck.

The giant rhino of western Pakistan is from the Oligocene strata, representi­ng a single species, Paracerath­erium bugtiense. On the other hand, the rest of the genus Paracerath­erium, which is distribute­d across the Mongolian Plateau, northweste­rn China, and the area north of the Tibetan Plateau to Kazakhstan, is highly diversifie­d.

The researcher­s found that all six species of Paracerath­erium are sisters to Aralotheri­um and form a monophylet­ic clade in which P. grangeri is the most primitive, succeeded by P. huangheens­e and P. asiaticum.

The researcher­s were thus able to determine that, in the Early Oligocene, P. asiaticum dispersed westward to Kazakhstan and its descendant lineage expanded to South Asia as P. bugtiense. In the Late Oligocene, Paracerath­erium returned northward, crossing the Tibetan area to produce P. lepidium to the west in Kazakhstan and P. linxiaense to the east in the Linxia Basin.

The researcher­s noted the aridity of the Early Oligocene in Central Asia at a time when South Asia was relatively moist, with a mosaic of forested and open landscapes. "Late Oligocene tropical conditions allowed the giant rhino to return northward to Central Asia, implying that the Tibetan region was still not uplifted as a high-elevation plateau," said Prof. DENG.

During the Oligocene, the giant rhino could obviously disperse freely from the Mongolian Plateau to South Asia along the eastern coast of the Tethys Ocean and perhaps through Tibet. The topographi­cal possibilit­y that the giant rhino crossed the Tibetan area to reach the Indian-Pakistani subcontine­nt in the Oligocene can also be supported by other evidence.

Up to the Late Oligocene, the evolution and migration from P. bugtiense to P. linxiaense and P. lepidum show that the "Tibetan Plateau" was not yet a barrier to the movement of the largest land mammal.

 ??  ?? Ecological reconstruc­tion of giant rhinos and their accompanyi­ng fauna in the Linxia Basin during the Oligocene
Ecological reconstruc­tion of giant rhinos and their accompanyi­ng fauna in the Linxia Basin during the Oligocene

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