A new species of crown-antlered deer Stephanocemas (Artiodactyla, Cervidae) from the middle Miocene of Qaidam Basin, northern Tibetan Plateau, China, and a preliminary evaluation of its phylogeny
Author
Wang, Xiaoming
Author
Xie, Guangpu
Author
Dong, Wei
text
Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society
2009
2009-07-31
156
3
680
695
https://academic.oup.com/zoolinnean/article-lookup/doi/10.1111/j.1096-3642.2008.00491.x
journal article
3166
10.1111/j.1096-3642.2008.00491.x
599d1f50-ec72-472b-bf86-545ab9964231
0024-4082
4687771
STEPHANOCEMAS
SP.
(
FIGS 7
,
8
)
Referred materials:
IVPP
V15725
(
Fig. 7
), a partial antler from
IVPP
CD9818
(
N37° 14′ 12.6″
E96° 44′ 49.8″
), in the north limb of the
Keluke
anticline of the
eastern Qaidam Basin
, collected by
Feng Wenqing
on
8 July 1998
;
IVPP
V15726
(
Fig. 8
), an antler fragment from
IVPP
CD0406
(
N36° 58′ 54.5″
E97° 23′ 29.3″
), in the
Bayin Mountain
section of the
eastern Qaidam Basin
, collected by
Ni Xijun
on
3 September 2004
.
Geological age:
IVPP
locality CD9818 is in the upper range of the Olongbuluk Fauna (
Wang
et al.
, 2007
) and has been palaeomagnetically estimated to be between 12–13 Mya (
Fang
et al.
, 2007
). This locality also produced an antler fragment of
Lagomeryx
, another early cervid frequently associated with
Stephanocemas
. The Bayin Mountain exposures, to the east of the fossiliferous Naoge area, have yielded few vertebrates, and
IVPP
CD0406 is one of a handful that produced identifiable materials. CD0406 has been correlated with the Olongbuluk Fauna as well, based on section measurements and biostratigraphical comparisons (
Wang
et al.
, 2007
). Lithologically, CD0406 and CD9818 are both in the predominantly greenish sandstones. Vertebrate fossils in the Olongbuluk Fauna in both sections (Huaitoutala and Bayin Mountain) are relatively rare, and a precise correlation of the two localities, separated by a distance of
65 km
, is not possible at this moment. It is likely, however, that both CD0406 and CD9818 are stratigraphically lower than beds that produced
S. palmatus
in Barun Yawula, and that all
Stephanocemas
-producing localities in the Qaidam Basin are middle Miocene in age (see further discussion in ‘Geology and age’ under
S. palmatus
).
Figure 7.
IVPP
V15725
,
Stephanocemas
sp.
from IVPP locality CD9818. A, stereophoto of dorsal view, B, lateral view, and C, ventral view of partial antler.
Figure 8.
IVPP
V15726
,
Stephanocemas
sp.
from IVPP locality CD0406. A, dorsal, and B, ventral views of antler fragment. Scale is for both views.
Description and comparison:
Both
IVPP
V15725
and
V15726
are of similarly small sizes, but lack of additional materials from their respective localities makes it difficult to judge if they belong to juvenile individuals. Although their tips are mostly missing,
V15725
has at least six tines, and those for
V15726
are not clear because only the posterior half the palm is preserved. The presumed posterior tine on
V15725
is short, broad-tipped, and vaguely suggestive of a branched tip. If the latter is not an artefact of weathering, it recalls the condition in
S. palmatus
. The pedicel is partially preserved in
V15725
, suggesting that this antler was not shed during life. In contrast,
V15726
has a distinct burr, as seen in most materials of
Stephanocemas
. Both specimens display a relatively flat palm portion of the antler, and even a relatively mediolaterally expanded palm. They also possess a distinct dorsal ridge connecting the anterior and posterior tines.
The latter two features are perhaps the most revealing about phylogenetic relationships. Whereas a flat and laterally expanded palm may indicate affinity with
S. palmatus
, the dorsal ridge, however, seems to imply a more primitive status as seen in species of
Paradicrocerus
and possibly in
S. actauensis
[the illustration in
Tleuberdina
et al.
(1993
: pl. XI, fig. 2a, b) is not clear enough to be sure of this feature]. Future discoveries may prove that
IVPP
V15725
and
V15726
belong to a distinct species of their own if such a unique combination of primitive and derived characters is confirmed, but because of the poor state of preservations we refrain from naming a new species.