Affiliation:
1. Centre for Climate-Impacted Terrestrial Ecosystems, Harry Butler Research Institute, Murdoch University, Australia
2. Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Western Australian Museum, Kew Street, Welshpool, WA, Australia
3. College of Science and Engineering, Flinders University, South Australia 5042, Australia
Abstract
The macropodine kangaroo,
Wallabia kitcheneri
, was first described in 1989 from a Pleistocene deposit within Mammoth Cave, southwestern Australia, on the basis of a few partial dentaries and maxilla fragments. Here, we recognize
W. kitcheneri
within the Pleistocene assemblages of the Thylacoleo Caves, south-central Australia, where it is represented by several cranial specimens and two near-complete skeletons, a probable male and female. We reallocate this species to the hitherto monotypic genus
Congruus
.
Congruus kitcheneri
differs from all other macropodid species by having a highly unusual pocket within the wall of the nasal cavity. It is distinguished from
C. congruus
by having a longer, narrower rostrum, a taller occiput and a deeper jugal.
Congruus
is closest to
Protemnodon
in overall cranial morphology but is smaller and less robust. In most postcranial attributes,
Congruus
also resembles
Protemnodon
, including general limb robustness and the atypical ratio of 14 thoracic to five lumbar vertebrae. It is distinguished by the high mobility of its glenohumeral joints, the development of muscle attachment sites for strong adduction and mobility of the forelimb, and large, robust manual and pedal digits with strongly recurved distal phalanges. These adaptations resemble those of tree-kangaroos more than ground-dwelling macropodines. We interpret this to imply that
C. kitcheneri
was semiarboreal, with a propensity to climb and move slowly through trees. This is the first evidence for the secondary adoption of a climbing habit within crown macropodines.
Funder
Murdoch University
National Geographic Society
Australian Research Council
Geological Survey of Western Australia
Sixty Minutes
Rio Tinto WA Future Fund
Flinders University
Western Australian Museum
Australia–Pacific Science Foundation
Cited by
9 articles.
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