Diprotodon, Owen, 1838

Price, Gilbert J., 2008, Taxonomy and palaeobiology of the largest-ever marsupial, Diprotodon Owen, 1838 (Diprotodontidae, Marsupialia), Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 153 (2), pp. 369-397 : 382

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1111/j.1096-3642.2008.00387.x

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10546321

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03DC87E5-D140-FFB4-23C1-FA4AFB79F89F

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Diprotodon
status

 

LANCEFIELD SWAMP DIPROTODON

DENTAL MORPHOMETRIC AND MORPHOLOGICAL

COMPARISON

The Diprotodon assemblage is represented by dentary and maxillary fragments, but is dominated by isolated teeth. Both size classes are undoubtedly represented in the deposit and the ratio of largeto small-form individuals is approximately 1:1. One dentary ( NMVP151805-6 ) represents a juvenile small-form individual. The individual appears to be of similar morphological age to the juvenile largeform individual ( QMF6633 ; Fig. 9F View Figure 9 ) from the Darling Downs (as determined by similar molar eruption patterns). The Lancefield Swamp specimen lacks the distinctive ‘chin’; the ventral margin of the horizontal ramus is more convex; and the posterior portion of the dentary is curved, similar to that of more mature individuals. Generally , from the limited number of dentaries available, no specific morphological differences were observed in comparison with either large- and/or small-form individuals of the Darling Downs , Bacchus Marsh and Lake Callabonna assemblages. Some dentaries show evidence of abrasion, possibly suggesting post-mortem fluvial transport .

More than 70 teeth were examined in the Lancefield Swamp collection. Tooth morphologies are identical to those of all other aforementioned localities, and thus do not warrant additional description. As the assemblage is dominated by isolated teeth, it is not possible to assign the majority of teeth to specific size classes. The mean molar teeth dimensions vary little in comparison with other assemblages, and the means overlap at less than one standard deviation for most measurements ( Tables 2, 3). However, similar to aforementioned examples from the Lake Callabonna Diprotodon assemblage, some teeth (e.g. P 3 and M 4) are larger than corresponding teeth in other populations. However, like those from Lake Callabonna, such teeth are represented by few specimens, and for reasons described above, the differences are probably the result of sampling biases.

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