Canis lupus Linnaeus, 1758

Fourvel, Jean-Baptiste, Fosse, Philippe, Fernandez, Philippe & Antoine, Pierre-Olivier, 2015, Large mammals of Fouvent-Saint-Andoche (Haute-Saône, France): a glimpse into a Late Pleistocene hyena den, Geodiversitas 37 (2), pp. 237-266 : 242

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5252/g2015n2a5

publication LSID

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:0117CBA4-4CE0-4431-B5F6-721F998C72C7

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038087D7-FFED-FF93-FEC1-FC9BFE1334EB

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Canis lupus Linnaeus, 1758
status

 

Canis lupus Linnaeus, 1758 View in CoL

MATERIAL EXAMINED. — NISP =37; MNI =12.

1989-1992 sample: 1 left maxillary; 2 left I3; 1 right C; 1 left P4; 1 left M2; 3 right i1; 6 left i1; 1 i1?; 1 right i2; 1 left i2; 1 left i2-3; 1 right c; 1 left c; 1 left p3; 1 right p4; 1 right m1; 1 right m2; 1 left m3; 1 canine?; 1 right ulna; 1 left ulna; 1 left tibia; 1 left metatarsal II; 3 first phalanges; 3 second phalanges.

DESCRIPTION

In Europe, two medium-to-large-sized canids coexist during the Late Pleistocene: wolf Canis lupus and dhole Cuon alpinus Pallas, 1811 . Their association in a same geochronological context suggests their potential identification in palaeontological samples (Perez-Ripoll et al. 2010; Pionnier-Capitan et al. 2011). Thirty seven bone remains recovered from the recent excavations have been related to large canids. The right lower carnassial (m1 – F9.C.264) has a large talonid with two cusps which is typical of wolves ( Fig.4D, E View FIG ). The general proportions of this carnassial (breadth= 12.5 mm, length= 27 mm) and of the left upper carnassial (P4 – H8.C.240) (breadth= 13 mm, length= 25 mm) match the range recorded for Late Pleistocene wolves (breadth and length variations in m1 11.1-13.2 by 26.5-33.4 mm and in P4 12.3-15.3 by 23.8-29.9 mm in Schütt 1969; Boudadi-Maligne 2010; Brugal & Boudadi- Maligne 2011). Yet, these carnassials are smaller than the ones referred to as Canis lupus maximus Boudadi-Maligne, 2012 , described at Jaurens (OIS3; Boudadi-Maligne 2012). Postcranial remains are also referable to C. lupus . In particular, the morphological features of the fragmentary left tibia G11.B.109 are diagnostic of Canis , as defined by Pionnier- Capitan et al. (2011): the border of the medial malleolus is salient and prominent, whereas the distal border of the cranial side is straight and regular; moreover, the proximo caudal tuberosity of the ulnar olecranon E11.B.112 is more prominent in Canis as observed by Pionnier-Capitan et al. (2011). To sum up, the large canid from Fouvent is unambiguously referable to Canis (morphological features) and more precisely to Canis lupus (dimensions).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Mammalia

Order

Carnivora

Family

Canidae

Genus

Canis

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