The tropical region of South America is one of the world's hot spots when it comes to animal diversity. The region's extinct fauna is unique, as documented by fossils of giant rodents and crocodylians -including crocodiles, alligators, caimans and gavials - that inhabited what is today a desert area in Venezuela. Five to ten million years ago, this was a humid swampy region teeming with life. One of its inhabitants was Stupendemys geographicus, a turtle species first described in the mid-1970s.
A graphic reconstruction of the giant turtle Stupendemys geographicus: male (front) and female individual (left) swimming in freshwater [Credit: Artwork: Jaime Chirinos] |
"The carapace of some Stupendemys individuals reached almost three meters, making it one of the largest, if not the largest turtle that ever existed," says Marcelo Sanchez, director of the Paleontological Institute and Museum of UZH and head of the study. The turtle had an estimated body mass of 1,145 kg - almost one hundred times that of its closest living relative, the big-headed Amazon river turtle.
Venezuelan Palaeontologist Rodolfo Sanchez and a male carapace of Stupendemys geographicus, from Venezuela, found in 8 million years old deposits [Credit: Edwin Cadena] |
Despite its tremendous size, the turtle had natural enemies. In many areas, the occurrence of Stupendemys coincides with Purussaurus, the largest caimans. This was most likely a predator of the giant turtle, given not only its size and dietary preferences, but also as inferred by bite marks and punctured bones in fossil carapaces of Stupendemys.
Venezuelan Palaeontologist Rodolfo Sanchez and a male carapace of Stupendemys geographicus, from Venezuela, found in 8 million years old deposits [Credit: Edwin Cadena] |
The discovery is published in Science Advances.
Source: University of Zurich [February 12, 2020]
* This article was originally published here
Комментариев нет:
Отправить комментарий