Large-sized fossil hamsters from the late Middle Pleistocene Locality 2 of Shanyangzhai, China, and discussion on the validity of Cricetinus and C. varians (Rodentia: Cricetidae)

A detailed morphological description and comparative study were conducted on numerous large-sized hamster remains collected from the late Middle Pleistocene Locality 2 of Shanyangzhai (Syz 2), Hebei Province, China. The comparisons reveal that these fossils are highly similar to the extant Tscherski...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kun Xie, Yunxiang Zhang, Yongxiang Li
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2023-07-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/15604.pdf
_version_ 1797422121247309824
author Kun Xie
Yunxiang Zhang
Yongxiang Li
author_facet Kun Xie
Yunxiang Zhang
Yongxiang Li
author_sort Kun Xie
collection DOAJ
description A detailed morphological description and comparative study were conducted on numerous large-sized hamster remains collected from the late Middle Pleistocene Locality 2 of Shanyangzhai (Syz 2), Hebei Province, China. The comparisons reveal that these fossils are highly similar to the extant Tscherskia triton in size and morphology, including the small degree of alternating between the main opposite cusps on M1-3, the presence of axioloph on M3, and mesolophids on m1-2 that are present but seldom reach the lingual margin of the teeth, among other features. However, minor differences between the two still exist. Consequently, all these fossils are designated as a chronosubspecies of the extant species, T. triton varians comb. nov. The skull and molar morphologies of Cricetinus varians and T. triton were meticulously compared to resolve the long-standing debate regarding the validity of Cricetinus Zdansky, 1928 and C. varians Zdansky, 1928. The findings indicate that the differences between the two are slight; as a result, C. varians can only be considered a chronosubspecies of T. triton, i.e., T. triton varians comb. nov., and Cricetinus should be recognized as a junior synonym of Tscherskia. We tentatively propose that, among the seven species once referred to Cricetinus, C. europaeus, C. gritzai, C. janossyi, and C. koufosi should be reassigned to Tscherskia, while C. beremendensis should be transferred to Allocricetus, and C. mesolophidos to Neocricetodon. Excluding Tscherskia sp. from the Late Pliocene Youhe fauna, there are no reliable Tscherskia fossils in China earlier than the Middle Pleistocene. Based on the current evidence, Tscherskia may have originated from Neocricetodon during the Early Pliocene in Europe and subsequently spread to Asia. T. triton is its sole surviving representative, which now exclusively inhabits East Asia.
first_indexed 2024-03-09T07:28:36Z
format Article
id doaj.art-cfc37e93edd3457b96bbfde421fc6247
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2167-8359
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-09T07:28:36Z
publishDate 2023-07-01
publisher PeerJ Inc.
record_format Article
series PeerJ
spelling doaj.art-cfc37e93edd3457b96bbfde421fc62472023-12-03T06:49:45ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592023-07-0111e1560410.7717/peerj.15604Large-sized fossil hamsters from the late Middle Pleistocene Locality 2 of Shanyangzhai, China, and discussion on the validity of Cricetinus and C. varians (Rodentia: Cricetidae)Kun XieYunxiang ZhangYongxiang LiA detailed morphological description and comparative study were conducted on numerous large-sized hamster remains collected from the late Middle Pleistocene Locality 2 of Shanyangzhai (Syz 2), Hebei Province, China. The comparisons reveal that these fossils are highly similar to the extant Tscherskia triton in size and morphology, including the small degree of alternating between the main opposite cusps on M1-3, the presence of axioloph on M3, and mesolophids on m1-2 that are present but seldom reach the lingual margin of the teeth, among other features. However, minor differences between the two still exist. Consequently, all these fossils are designated as a chronosubspecies of the extant species, T. triton varians comb. nov. The skull and molar morphologies of Cricetinus varians and T. triton were meticulously compared to resolve the long-standing debate regarding the validity of Cricetinus Zdansky, 1928 and C. varians Zdansky, 1928. The findings indicate that the differences between the two are slight; as a result, C. varians can only be considered a chronosubspecies of T. triton, i.e., T. triton varians comb. nov., and Cricetinus should be recognized as a junior synonym of Tscherskia. We tentatively propose that, among the seven species once referred to Cricetinus, C. europaeus, C. gritzai, C. janossyi, and C. koufosi should be reassigned to Tscherskia, while C. beremendensis should be transferred to Allocricetus, and C. mesolophidos to Neocricetodon. Excluding Tscherskia sp. from the Late Pliocene Youhe fauna, there are no reliable Tscherskia fossils in China earlier than the Middle Pleistocene. Based on the current evidence, Tscherskia may have originated from Neocricetodon during the Early Pliocene in Europe and subsequently spread to Asia. T. triton is its sole surviving representative, which now exclusively inhabits East Asia.https://peerj.com/articles/15604.pdfShanyangzhai faunaCricetinus variansTscherskia triton variansNeocricetodon
spellingShingle Kun Xie
Yunxiang Zhang
Yongxiang Li
Large-sized fossil hamsters from the late Middle Pleistocene Locality 2 of Shanyangzhai, China, and discussion on the validity of Cricetinus and C. varians (Rodentia: Cricetidae)
PeerJ
Shanyangzhai fauna
Cricetinus varians
Tscherskia triton varians
Neocricetodon
title Large-sized fossil hamsters from the late Middle Pleistocene Locality 2 of Shanyangzhai, China, and discussion on the validity of Cricetinus and C. varians (Rodentia: Cricetidae)
title_full Large-sized fossil hamsters from the late Middle Pleistocene Locality 2 of Shanyangzhai, China, and discussion on the validity of Cricetinus and C. varians (Rodentia: Cricetidae)
title_fullStr Large-sized fossil hamsters from the late Middle Pleistocene Locality 2 of Shanyangzhai, China, and discussion on the validity of Cricetinus and C. varians (Rodentia: Cricetidae)
title_full_unstemmed Large-sized fossil hamsters from the late Middle Pleistocene Locality 2 of Shanyangzhai, China, and discussion on the validity of Cricetinus and C. varians (Rodentia: Cricetidae)
title_short Large-sized fossil hamsters from the late Middle Pleistocene Locality 2 of Shanyangzhai, China, and discussion on the validity of Cricetinus and C. varians (Rodentia: Cricetidae)
title_sort large sized fossil hamsters from the late middle pleistocene locality 2 of shanyangzhai china and discussion on the validity of cricetinus and c varians rodentia cricetidae
topic Shanyangzhai fauna
Cricetinus varians
Tscherskia triton varians
Neocricetodon
url https://peerj.com/articles/15604.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT kunxie largesizedfossilhamstersfromthelatemiddlepleistocenelocality2ofshanyangzhaichinaanddiscussiononthevalidityofcricetinusandcvariansrodentiacricetidae
AT yunxiangzhang largesizedfossilhamstersfromthelatemiddlepleistocenelocality2ofshanyangzhaichinaanddiscussiononthevalidityofcricetinusandcvariansrodentiacricetidae
AT yongxiangli largesizedfossilhamstersfromthelatemiddlepleistocenelocality2ofshanyangzhaichinaanddiscussiononthevalidityofcricetinusandcvariansrodentiacricetidae