Phylogenetic Systematics Of The North American Fossil Caninae (Carnivora: Canidae)
Author
TEDFORD R. H.
Author
WANG X.
Author
TAYLOR B. E.
text
Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History
2009
2009-09-03
2009
325
1
218
journal article
0003-0090
Eucyon
Tedford and Qiu, 1996
Type
Species:
Canis davisi
Merriam, 1911
.
Included North American Species:
Eucyon davisi
(Merriam), 1911
, and
E.
?
skinneri
,
new species
.
Distribution in North America: Late Clarendonian of Nebraska and Hemphillian of Kansas, New
Mexico
, Oklahoma, Texas, Arizona, Nevada, Oregon, California, and northern
Mexico
.
Revised Diagnosis:
Eucyon
has no autapomorphies but is distinguished from the fossil and living
Vulpini
and the
Cerdocyonina
by possession of synapomorphies also present in all other members of the
Canina
: frontal sinus invading base of postorbital process removing ‘‘vulpine-crease’’ or depression from dorsal surface of process; paroccipital process expanded posteriorly usually with salient tip; mastoid process enlarged as knob or ridgelike prominence; loss of foxlike lateral flare and eversion of dorsal border of orbital part of zygoma.
Primitive characters retained by
Eucyon
relative to those of most species of
Canis
are: frontal sinus less posteriorly extended, ends anterior to frontoparietal suture and does not completely invade postorbital process; supraoccipital shield fan-shaped, inion broad and not strongly overhanging condyles; I3 less enlarged relative to I2 with weaker posteromedial cingulum; M1 paracone and metacone subequal in size; M2 metaconule weak or absent, postprotocrista present; m1 entoconid and hypoconid usually not joined by transverse crest; angular process of mandibular ramus less expanded with smaller fossa for inferior pterygoid muscle; forelimb short relative to hindlimb, radius/tibia ratio less than 80%; and humerus often with entepicondylar foramen.
Derived features linking
Eucyon
with
Canis
include: zygomatic arch strongly arched rather than gently curved, and p4 with second posterior cusp.
Discussion: In general, the morphology of
Eucyon
is similar to that of
Vulpes
, as they share numerous primitive features. However,
Eucyon
, like the South American cerdocyonines, possesses a small frontal sinus that does not fully penetrate the postorbital process, and it does not extend as far posteriorly as in most species of
Canis
.
Eucyon
does share with
Canis
species
two synapomorphies lacking in the cerdocyonines, namely, the presence of a second posterior cusp on p4, and the strongly arched zygoma.
In North America,
Canis
is not known until the late Hemphillian.
Canis ferox
Miller and Carranza-Castañeda (1998)
tends to be morphologically intermediate between
Eucyon davisi
and
Canis lepophagus
. The former shows the derived enlargement of the frontal sinus that distinguishes it from
E. davisi
and supports its relationship to
Canis
.