Name:
Diadiaphorus.
Phonetic: De-ah-de-ah-foe-rus.
Named By: Ameghino - 1887.
Classification: Chordata, Mammalia, Litopterna,
Proterotheriidae.
Species: D. caniadensis
(type).
Diet: Herbivore.
Size: 1.2 meters long.
Known locations: Argentina, Bolivia.
Time period: Aquitanian to Serravallian of the
Miocene.
Fossil representation: Few specimens.
Although
it looks a lot like a small primitive horse, Diadiaphorus
was
actually a litoptern. True horses evolved in the North and did not
even get the opportunity to reach South America until the formation of
the isthmus of Panama triggered the event that is called the Great
American Interchange. The similarity to horses exhibited in
Diadiaphorusis best explained by convergent
evolution. This is where
the same habitats existed in South America as they Did in North
America, but because of the absence of actual horses, some members
of another group of mammals (in this case litopterns) evolved along
similar lines to fill a vacant ecological niche. Not all litopterns
evolved to be like horses however, others like Theosodon
and
Macrauchenia
were more camel-like in their appearance.
In
size and physical form, Diadiaphorus most closely
resembles primitive
horses like Mesohippus
and like this horse, Diadiaphorus is thought
to have been a browser of soft vegetation rather than a grazer of
grass. This view is reinforced by the observation that the molar
teeth have low crowns similar to other browsers, whereas grass
grazers tend to have proportionately higher crowned molars.
Diadiaphorus also supported its weight upon a
central toe while the
others no longer seem to have served any weight bearing function,
development that would be followed by true horses to the point of
today’s modern forms that have a single toe that ends in a hoof.
There is one key difference above all others that proves Diadiaphorus is in no way related to horses. Horse limbs, just like your own, are divided into upper and lower portions. The upper is supported by a single solid bone, femur in the rear, humerus in the fore. The lower portions however are supported by a pair of bones that connect the upper leg with the foot and these are the tibia and fibula in the rear and the ulna and radius in the fore. In Diadiaphorus these bones are separate and would have been joined only by muscle and tendon like they are in most other animals. In horses however these lower leg bones are fused together for greater rigidity when running at speed. While Diadiaphorus with its long legs was undoubtedly adapting for speed and more energy efficient locomotion across plains, it was almost certainly not in the same leagues as true horse.
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