Caninemys, a New Side-Necked Turtle (Pelomedusoides: Podocnemididae) from the Miocene of Brazil
Author
Meylan, Peter A.
Author
Gaffney, Eugene S.
Author
De Almeida Campos, Diogenes
text
American Museum Novitates
2009
2009-03-31
3639
1
26
http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.1206/608.1
journal article
10.1206/608.1
0003-0082
5356430
Caninemys tridentata
,
new species
TYPE
SPECIMEN
:
DNPM-MCT 1496
-
R
, a nearly complete skull (
figs. 1–4
) collected by
L.I. Price
in 1962
.
TYPE
LOCALITY
: Locality 28 of
L.I. Price
,
Volta de Pedra Pintada
,
upper Rio Juruá
,
Acre
,
Brazil
(
fig. 5
)
.
HORIZON: Vertebrate fossils from the upper Rio Juruá are typically found in two beds associated with the
Ucayali
Unconformity (
Gaffney et al., 1998
,
Campbell et al., 2000
). They come from late Miocene Red Beds of the Contamana Group that lie below the unconformity (‘‘Huayquerian Beds’’ of
Lapparent de Broin et al., 1993
), or they come from the
Acre
Conglomerate unit of the
Madre de Dios
Formation, which overlies the unconformity (Campbell et al., 1985, 2001). Paleochannels filled with younger sediments that are known to produce vertebrate fossils elsewhere in
Acre
are apparently not accessible along the upper Rio Juruá (
Campbell et al., 2000
). It is unlikely that this skull is from a younger horizon. The
Acre
Conglomerate is also considered to be of late Miocene age by
Frailey (1986)
and
Campbell et al. (2001)
. Thus, we assign
DNPM-MCT
1496-
R
to a late Miocene age, even though we do not know with certainty from which side of the
Ucayali
Unconformity it has come.
Fig. 1.
Caninemys tridentata
,
new genus and species
, DNPM-MCT 1496-R holotype. Partially restored views of skull.
A
, Dorsal;
B
, ventral;
C
, lateral. (B. Degner, del.)
Lapparent de Broin et al. (1993)
included this skull among turtle material they reported from ‘‘Huayquerian Beds’’ and referenced the work of
Campos and de Broin (1981)
. The latter reference lists this material only as coming from the Neogene of
Acre
. We have not been able to confirm an origin from the ‘‘Huayquerian Beds’’ below the
Ucayali
Unconformity. Discussion of a lower jaw (see below) that might be assigned to this taxon and other geologic references are in
Gaffney et al. (1998)
.
DIAGNOSIS: Same as for the genus.
ETYMOLOGY: The species epithet is based on the tridentate appearance of the skull that is most clearly seen in anterior view.
DISCUSSION: Although this taxon cannot be differentiated from the shell-based
Stupendemys geographicus
Wood, 1976
, because there is no overlap in presently known morphology, it is likely that
Caninemys
is significantly smaller than the Venezuelan
Stupendemys
. Using skull-shell ratios of recent specimens of
Podocnemis expansa
and other recent podocnemidid species, it is hypothesized that the shell of
Caninemys
would be less than
4–5 feet
in length rather than the 7-foot plus length of
Stupendemys
. For comparison, the largest skulls of recent
Podocnemis expansa
have a condylobasal length of about
12 cm
(Williams, 1956) and the Mio-Pliocene
Podocnemis bassleri
(Williams, 1956; very similar to
P. expansa
in morphology) is
15.7 cm
in length, compared to about 16.5–17.0 cm for
Caninemys
. It is of course possible that smaller species of
Stupendemys
were present in the
Acre region
and that
Caninemys
is the skull of one of these, but this is only speculation.