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词条 Woolly rhinoceros
释义

  1. Evolution

  2. Description

  3. Behavior and habitat

     Diet 

  4. Extinction

  5. See also

  6. References

  7. External links

{{Speciesbox
| name = Woolly rhinoceros
| fossil_range = {{Fossil range|3.6|0.01}}Late Pliocene – Late Pleistocene
| image = Coelodonta antiquitatis .jpg
| image_caption = Woolly rhinoceros skeleton on display
| genus = Coelodonta
| species = antiquitatis
| authority = (Blumenbach, 1807)
| synonyms = Rhinoceros tichorhinus (Fischer)[1]
}}

The woolly rhinoceros (Coelodonta antiquitatis) is an extinct species of rhinoceros that was common throughout Europe and northern Asia[2] during the Pleistocene epoch and survived until the end of the last glacial period. The genus name Coelodonta means "cavity tooth". The woolly rhinoceros was a member of the Pleistocene megafauna.

Evolution

As the last and most derived member of the Pleistocene rhinoceros lineage, the woolly rhinoceros was well adapted to its environment. Stocky limbs and thick woolly pelage made it well suited to the steppe-tundra environment prevalent across the Palearctic ecozone during the Pleistocene glaciations. Like the vast majority of rhinoceroses, the body plan of the woolly rhinoceros adhered to a conservative morphology, like the first rhinoceroses seen in the late Eocene.

A study of 40,000- to 70,000-year-old DNA samples showed its closest extant relative is the Sumatran rhinoceros.

Description

The appearance of woolly rhinos is known from mummified individuals from Siberia as well as cave paintings.[4] An adult woolly rhinoceros was typically around {{convert|3|to|3.8|m|ft}} in length, with an estimated weight of around {{convert|1800|-|2700|kg|lb|abbr=on}}[2] or {{convert|2000|kg|lb|abbr=on}}.[2] The woolly rhinoceros could grow to be {{convert|2|m|ft|abbr=on}} tall;[2] the body size was thus comparable to, or slightly larger than, the extant white rhinoceros.[8] Two horns on the skull were made of keratin, the anterior horn being {{convert|61|cm|in|abbr=on}} in length,[9] with a smaller horn between its eyes.[10] It had thick, long fur, small ears, short, thick legs, and a stocky body. Cave paintings suggest a wide dark band between the front and hind legs, but the feature is not universal, and the identification of pictured rhinoceroses as woolly rhinoceros is uncertain.

Its shape was known only from prehistoric cave drawings until a completely preserved specimen (missing only the fur and hooves) was discovered in a tar pit in Starunia, Poland. The specimen, an adult female, is now on display in the Polish Academy of Sciences' Museum of Natural History in Kraków. Several frozen specimens have also been found in Siberia, the latest in 2015.[3]

Behavior and habitat

The woolly rhinoceros used its horns for defensive purposes and to attract mates. During Greenland Stadial 2 (the Last Glacial Maximum[12]) the North Sea retreated northward, as sea levels were up to {{convert|125|m|ft}} lower than today. The woolly rhinoceros roamed the exposed Doggerland and much of Northern Europe and was common in the cold, arid desert that later became southern England[13] and the North Sea today. Its geographical range expanded and contracted with the alternating cold and warm cycles, forcing populations to migrate as glaciers receded. The woolly rhinoceros co-existed with woolly mammoths and several other extinct larger mammals of the Pleistocene megafauna. A close relative, Elasmotherium, had a more southerly range.

In 2011, a 3.6-million-year-old woolly rhinoceros fossil, the oldest known, was discovered on the cold Tibetan Plateau, suggesting that it existed there during a period of general climate warmth around the earth. It is believed they migrated from there to northern Asia and Europe when the Ice Age began.[14]

Females gave birth to one or two calves.[15]

Diet

Controversy has long surrounded the precise dietary preference of Coelodonta as past investigations have found both grazing and browsing modes of life to be plausible. The palaeodiet of the woolly rhinoceros has been reconstructed using several lines of evidence. Climatic reconstructions indicate the preferred environment to have been cold and arid steppe-tundra, with large herbivores forming an important part of the feedback cycle. Pollen analysis shows a prevalence of grasses and sedges within a more complicated vegetation mosaic.{{Citation needed|date=May 2007}}

A strain vector biomechanical investigation of the skull, mandible and teeth of a well-preserved last cold stage individual recovered from Whitemoor Haye, Staffordshire, revealed musculature and dental characteristics that support a grazing feeding preference. In particular, the enlargement of the temporalis and neck muscles is consistent with that required to resist the large tugging forces generated when taking large mouthfuls of fodder from the ground. The presence of a large diastema supports this theory.

Comparisons with extant perissodactyls confirm that Coelodonta was a hindgut fermentor with a single stomach, and as such would have grazed upon cellulose-rich, protein-poor fodder. This method of digestion would have required a large throughput of food and thus links the large mouthful size to the low nutritive content of the chosen grasses and sedges.[4]

Recent evidence suggests that woolly rhinos lived in the Arctic during the Last Glacial Maximum consumed approximately equal volumes of forbs, such as Artemisia, and graminoids.[5]

{{Clear}}

Extinction

{{Main|Pleistocene megafauna}}

Many species of Pleistocene megafauna, like the woolly rhinoceros, became extinct around the same time period. Human hunting is often cited as one cause.[18] Other theories for the cause of the extinctions are climate change associated with the receding Ice age and the hyperdisease hypothesis (q.v. Quaternary extinction event).[19] One of the more widely accepted theories states that, although the woolly rhinoceros was specialized for cold weather, it was capable of surviving in warmer climates (Shapiro). This suggests that climate change was not the only factor contributing to the rhinoceros's extinction (Naish). Other cold-adapted species, such as reindeer, muskox and wisent, survived this period of climatic change and many others like it, supporting the 'overkill' hypothesis for the woolly rhino.

Recent radiocarbon dating indicates that populations survived as recently as 8,000 BC in western Siberia. However, the accuracy of this date is uncertain, as several radiocarbon plateaus exist around this time. The extinction does not coincide with the end of the last ice age, but does coincide with a minor yet severe climatic reversal that lasted for about 1,000–1,250 years, the Younger Dryas (GS1—Greenland Stadial 1), characterized by glacial readvances and severe cooling globally, a brief interlude in the continuing warming subsequent to the termination of the last major ice age (GS2), thought to have been due to a shutdown of the thermohaline circulation in the ocean due to huge influxes of cold fresh water from the preceding sustained glacial melting during the warmer Interstadial (GI1—Greenland Interstadial 1: ca. 16,000–11,450 14C years B.P.).

The Pinhole Cave Man is a late Paleolithic figure of a man engraved on a rib bone of a woolly rhinoceros, found at Creswell Crags in England.[20]

See also

Elasmotherium, another woolly rhinoceros species

{{Portal bar|Paleontology}}

References

1. ^{{cite article|title=Quaternary mammalian fossils from Hsintsai, South-Eastern part of Honan|author1=Pei Wen-Chung|journal=Acta Palaeontologica Sinica|year=1956|url=http://en.cnki.com.cn/Article_en/CJFDTOTAL-GSWX195601009.htm|accessdate=21 March 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180321103545/http://en.cnki.com.cn/Article_en/CJFDTOTAL-GSWX195601009.htm|archive-date=21 March 2018}}
2. ^{{Cite journal | last1 = Boeskorov | first1 = G. G. | title = Some specific morphological and ecological features of the fossil woolly rhinoceros (Coelodonta antiquitatis Blumenbach 1799) | doi = 10.1134/S106235901208002X | journal = Biology Bulletin | volume = 39 | issue = 8 | pages = 692–707 | year = 2012 | pmid = | pmc = }}
3. ^{{Cite web|url=http://siberiantimes.com/science/casestudy/news/n0129-meet-sasha-the-worlds-only-baby-woolly-rhino/|title=Meet Sasha - the world's only baby woolly rhino|website=siberiantimes.com|language=en|access-date=2018-04-18}}
4. ^SAS Bulletin, Volume 26, number 3/4, Winter 2003 from the Society for Archaeological Sciences
5. ^{{cite journal|vauthors=Willerslev E, Davison J, Moora M, Zobel M, Coissac E, Edwards ME, Lorenzen ED, Vestergård M, Gussarova G, Haile J, Craine J, Gielly L, Boessenkool S, Epp LS, Pearman PB, Cheddadi R, Murray D, Bråthen KA, Yoccoz N, Binney H, Cruaud C, Wincker P, Goslar T, Alsos IG, Bellemain E, Brysting AK, Elven R, Sønstebø JH, Murton J, Sher A, Rasmussen M, Rønn R, Mourier T, Cooper A, Austin J, Möller P, Froese D, Zazula G, Pompanon F, Rioux D, Niderkorn V, Tikhonov A, Savvinov G, Roberts RG, MacPhee RD, Gilbert MT, Kjær KH, Orlando L, Brochmann C, Taberlet P |title=Fifty thousand years of Arctic vegetation and megafaunal diet|journal=Nature|year=2014|volume=506|issue=7486|pages=47–51|doi=10.1038/nature12921|pmid=24499916}}
6. ^{{cite web | url = http://www.rhinos.org/rhinos/extinct-woolly-rhino | title = Extinct Woolly Rhino | publisher = International Rhino Foundation | accessdate = 2015-02-07 }}
7. ^{{cite book | url = https://books.google.dk/books?id=8ikKezOKRB4C&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q&f=false | title = Frozen Fauna of the Mammoth Steppe | isbn = 9780226311234 | last1 = Dale Guthrie | first1 = R. | year = 1990 }}
8. ^{{cite book | title = The complete guide to prehistoric life | last = Haines | first = Tim | last2 = Chambers | first2 = Paul | year = 2005 | publisher = Firefly Books | location = Buffalo, N.Y. | isbn = 978-1-55407-181-4 | edition = First | page = 203 | chapter = Coelodonta }}
9. ^{{cite journal | title= The morphology and paleobiological significance of the horns ofCoelodonta antiquitatis(Mammalia: Rhinocerotidae) | last1= Fortelius | first1= Mikael | journal= Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology | volume= 3 | issue= 2 | year= 1983 | pages= 125–135 | issn = 0272-4634 | doi = 10.1080/02724634.1983.10011964 }}
10. ^{{cite web | url= http://www.hanskrause.de/HKHPE/hkhpe_07_02.htm | title = HKHPE 07 02 | first= Hans | last= Krause | work= hanskrause.de | year=2011 | accessdate=July 12, 2012 }}
11. ^{{cite web | url = http://lightyears.blogs.cnn.com/2011/09/01/ice-age-giants-may-have-evolved-in-tibet | title = Ice Age giants may have evolved in Tibet | publisher=CNN | date=1 September 2011 | accessdate=2 September 2011 }}
12. ^{{cite book | title= Guns, Germs and Steel | last=Diamond | first=Jared | year=1997 | publisher=Vintage | location=New York |isbn=978-0-09-930278-0 |pages= |url= }}
13. ^{{cite journal | url = http://www.unl.edu/rhames/courses/current/requiem-overkill.pdf | title=A requiem for North American overkill | last=Grayson | first=D. K. | last2 = Meltzer | first2 = D. J. | year = 2003 | month= | journal = Journal of Archaeological Science | volume=30 | issue= 5 | pages=585–593 | id= | accessdate= |quote= | doi=10.1016/S0305-4403(02)00205-4 }}
14. ^{{cite web | url = https://www.britishmuseum.org/research/search_the_collection_database/search_object_details.aspx?objectId=1528116&partId=1 | title = engraved bone/antler | publisher = British Museum }}
15. ^{{cite journal | title = Woolly rhinoceros from the Scottish Pleistocene | doi=10.1144/sjg02030253 | year = 1966 | last1= Ian Rolfe | first1= W. D. | journal = Scottish Journal of Geology | volume=2 | issue=3 | pages=253–285 }}
16. ^{{cite journal | title = Revised radiocarbon ages on woolly rhinoceros (Coelodonta antiquitatis) from western central Scotland: significance for timing the extinction of woolly rhinoceros in Britain and the onset of the LGM in central Scotland | last1 = Jacobi | first1=Roger M. | last2 = Rose | first2 = James | last3 = MacLeod | first3 = Alison | last4 = Higham | first4 = Thomas F.G. | journal= Quaternary Science Reviews | volume=28 | issue=25–26 | year = 2009 | pages=2551–2556 | issn = 0277-3791 | doi = 10.1016/j.quascirev.2009.08.010 }}
17. ^{{cite news | url = http://www.bbc.co.uk/nature/20497828 | title = Prehistoric rhino reveals secrets | first = Matt | last = Walker | work = BBC News | date = 6 December 2012 }}
[6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13][14][15][16][17]
}}
  • Parker, Steve. Dinosaurus: The Complete Guide to Dinosaurs. Firefly Books Inc, 2003. Pg. 422.

External links

{{Commons category|Coelodonta antiquitatis}}{{Wikispecies|Coelodonta antiquitatis}}
  • [https://web.archive.org/web/20160314031316/http://www.zwoje-scrolls.com/zwoje40/text19p.htm More pictures of the fully preserved tar pit wholly rhinoceros that was found in Poland (text in Polish)]
  • Fossil skull of a woolly rhinoceros from Belgium
  • Fossil skull of a woolly rhinoceros from Germany
  • International Rhino Foundation: Woolly Rhino
{{Taxonbar|from=Q188949}}

6 : Pleistocene extinctions|Prehistoric mammals of Europe|Pliocene rhinoceroses|Piacenzian first appearances|Pleistocene rhinoceroses|Fossil taxa described in 1831

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