Saber-toothed cat

From Freepedia

The term saber-toothed cat describes numerous cat-like species that lived during various parts of the Cenozoic and evolved their saber-toothed characteristics entirely independently. The saber-tooth morphology is an excellent example of convergent evolution as it occurred repeatedly and independently in at least four distinct mammalian groups.

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Saber-tooth genera

The genera of sabre-toothed cats, along with the regions and time periods where they have been found, is summarized here:

Genus Name Number of Species Times Regions
Smilodon 4 2.5 MYA to 11,000 YA North America
Hoplophoneus 5 33.7 MYA to 23.8 MYA North and South America
Homotherium 1 3 MYA to 10,000 YA Europe and Asia
Thylacosmilus (marsupial) 1 10 MYA to 1.8 MYA Australia
Metailurus 1 15 MYA to 8 MYA China and Eastern Europe
Machairodus (Ancestral to Homotherium) 5 15 MYA to 2 MYA Africa, Europe, Asia, and North America
Megantereon 2 3 MYA - 9,000 Years Ago Africa, Eurasia, and North America
Dinofelis 5 5 MYA to 1.5 MYA Africa, Eurasia, and North America
Paramachairodus 2 20-15 MYA to 9 MYA Spain
Xenosmilus (1 specimen) 1 1 MYA (?) Central Florida

Saber-tooth evolutionary tree

All saber-tooth mammals lived between 9,000 and 33.7 million years ago, but the evolutionary lines that lead to the various saber-tooth genera started to diverge much earlier.

The lineage that led to Thylacosmilus was the first to split off, in the late Cretaceous. It is a marsupial, and thus more closely related to kangaroos and opossums than the felines. The creodonts diverged next, and then the nimravids, before they blossoming of the truly feline saber-tooths.

Why such large teeth?

The most dramatic feature common to all of the so-called saber-toothed cats is their enlarged upper canines. While it is generally agreed upon that they were used in hunting, the exact way they were used has been debated since the 1880s when Smilodon was first described.

Grabbing

Some paleontologists believe that the primary purpose is to grab and hold large prey. This is not well supported by evidence, however, as it has been shown that saber-teeth used in this way may be broken relatively easily, and fossil skulls with broken saber-teeth are rare.

Slashing

A more accepted hypothesis suggests that saber-teeth were used for a shearing bite to the throat or abdomen of large prey (Akersten, 1985), or to deliver deep stab wounds, from which the prey would eventually bleed to death.

Display

Another possible use was as a social display structure (like most horns and antlers). If this is the case, it would support the theory that sabertooths were social animals.

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