GSA 2020 Connects Online

Paper No. 155-3
Presentation Time: 6:00 PM

RE-EVALUATING HYPERTRAGULID DIVERSITY IN THE JOHN DAY BASIN, OREGON


JEWELL, Lana K., Museum of Natural History, University of Colorado at Boulder, 1030 Broadway, Boulder, CO 80302 and FAMOSO, Nicholas A., U.S. National Park Service, John Day Fossil Beds National Monument, Kimberly, OR 97848

Despite their relative abundance, members of the family Hypertragulidae (order Artiodactyla, class Mammalia) have proved a conundrum regarding species diversity in the Turtle Cove Member (Oligocene) of the John Day Formation, located in central and eastern Oregon. Three species and two separate genera are described in the area, but previous research lacks statistical support for this level of variation. We use coefficients of variation (V) on measurements of dentition and astragali of hypertragulid specimens designated Hypertragulus hesperius, Hypertragulus minutus, and Nanotragulus planiceps as a metric for determining if there were multiple species present in the population. Asymptotic and the modified signed-likelihood ratio V equality tests show that V values of anterior-posterior molar length and transverse molar width vary significantly when comparing single species of modern ecological analogs (Muntiacus muntjak, Muntiacus reevesi, and Tragulus javanicus) to groupings of a combined population. However, the V equality tests on dental and postcranial measurements yield almost no significant results when comparing variation in the extinct John Day hypertragulids to an extant population comprised of a single species. Similar comparisons between astragali measurements of hypertragulids and T. javanicus express no significant difference in the level of variation from the combined population to a modern single species. The low level of variation in the hypertragulids and the lack of differentiation between dental characters of individuals does not statistically support the hypothesis that there were multiple species present in the population, suggesting either that cryptic species may be present but impossible to identify without soft tissue remains, or simply that may have been taxonomic over-splitting of a single hypertragulid species in the John Day region.