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New fossil find may shed light on how sabre toothed predators evolved

- Julien Benoit

Prehistoric bestiary is full of remarkable creatures and fearsome predators.

Sabre toothed cats, with their long, protruding canines, are probably the most recognisable, and have featured a great deal in popular culture like books and movies.

The African continent had its fair share of these sabre toothed cats. Among them were Megantereon, Homotherium and Dinofelis, which shared the ancient landscape with our human ancestors, the early hominims, between one million and five million years ago.

But those cats weren’t the first sabre toothed predators to roam Africa. Some 250 to 260 million years ago, during the Permian period, the world’s most feared sabre toothed predators were the gorgonopsians.

These sabre toothed carnivores belonged to the family of reptilian-looking mammalian ancestors called the Therapsida. They were found across the continent we know today as Africa, from the south to as far north as Niger. Gorgonopsians reigned supreme at the top of the food chain for about 10 million years before they were wiped out during the end of the Permian mass extinction event 252 million years ago.

Now a team from the Evolutionary Studies Institute at South Africa’s University of the Witwatersrand has discovered the fossil remains of what may be the oldest large-sized gorgonopsian ever found. The extremely well preserved fossil was found in Laingsburg, a town in South Africa’s arid Karoo region.

The snout of the fossil skull found in Laingsburg. The large meat shearing teeth are quite conspicuous. Julien Benoit

Gorgonopsians have previously been discovered in similar rock layers from the same area, but these were poorly-preserved specimens of small, dog-sized animals. The skull we found is complete, undeformed and lion-sized. This is an important discovery from an evolutionary point of view, because it would show that gorgonopsians started out big. That contradicts what’s known in science as Cope’s rule, which states that species tend to start small and grow bigger as they evolve.

Why sabre teeth?

This discovery, as with any others that involve sabre toothed animals, is also important because it could shed light on how the predators actually used their terrifying teeth.

Some scientists believe it was a lethal stabbing weapon used to pierce prey’s carotid arteries. Some gorgonopsian species had canines longer than the tooth of a tyrannosaur. Others – myself included – argue that a long canine is also represented in herbivores, such as the musk deer or the muntjac, which use it for display to attract mates. Gorgonopsians could have had sabre teeth for the same reason. And, of course, the two hypotheses may not be mutually exclusive.

The only way to answer this question definitively is to find more well preserved fossils such as the recently discovered Laingsburg specimen. With more fossils, we might be able to find out whether both male and female gorgonopsians had sabre-like canines.

If only males did, this could mean the teeth were only important for parading themselves to females, or fighting with other males – rather than for hunting.

More fossils needed

The newly discovered large gorgonopsian will now have to be studied carefully to ascertain exactly what we’ve found and what its significance may be. It is currently being cleaned and prepared by technicians at the Evolutionary Studies Institute to remove the rock matrix from the bones. This process can take several months. Then, the discovery will have to be published in a peer-reviewed journal, accompanied by a full description and, possibly, a new species name.

Charlton Dube (ESI, Wits University) uses an airscribe to clean the specimen. Marco Romano

Then – with enough funding – we plan to head back into the field. It’s very possible that there are more beautifully preserved fossils to be found in the Laingsburg area.

With enough fossils, we may get a clearer picture of the ancient Permian environment and be able to solve the mystery of the origin, evolution and death of the “king of the Permian jungle”.The Conversation

Julien Benoit, Postdoc in Vertebrate Palaeontology, University of the Witwatersrand. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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