Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-nr4z6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-09T22:41:46.229Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

An early Hemphillian occurrence of Castor (Castoridae) from the Rattlesnake Formation of Oregon

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 July 2015

Joshua X. Samuels
Affiliation:
1National Park Service, John Day Fossil Beds National Monument, 32651 Highway 19, Kimberly, Oregon 97848, USA,
John Zancanella
Affiliation:
2Bureau of Land Management, 3050 NE Third Street, Prineville, Oregon 97754, USA,

Abstract

Castor, the extant beaver, is an important member of North American and Eurasian communities, altering ecosystems and landscapes wherever it occurs. Castor has a fossil record extending back to the late Miocene in Europe, Asia, and North America. The origin and early evolution of this genus is unclear but it likely originated in Eurasia and subsequently dispersed to North America from Asia in the late Miocene. A new record of Castor from the Rattlesnake Formation of Oregon represents the earliest occurrence of the genus in North America. The age of this new find is inferred through radiometric and magnetostratigraphic dating to be between 7.05 and 7.3 Ma. This age is supported by the co-occurrence of another beaver, Dipoides stirtoni, which is characteristic of early Hemphillian deposits. This find indicates that Castor had dispersed to North America by the early Hemphillian, and helps resolve the timing of divergence between North American and Eurasian beavers. The Rattlesnake Formation specimens are not differentiable from other North American specimens of C. californicus in morphology or size. This suggests Castor changed little after dispersing to North America, whereas the endemic castoroidine beavers changed dramatically after its arrival.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Paleontological Society 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Boellstorff, J. D. 1978. Chronology of some late Cenozoic deposits from the central United States and the Ice Ages. Nebraska Academy of Sciences Transactions, 6: 3549.Google Scholar
Bowditch, T. E. 1821. An Analysis of the Natural Classifications of Mammalia for the Use of Students and Travelers. J. Smith, Paris, 151 p.Google Scholar
Butler, D. R. 1995. Zoogeomorphology: Animals as Geomorphic Agents. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 239 p.Google Scholar
Conrad, G. S. 1980. The biostratigraphy and mammalian paleontology of the Glenns Ferry Formation from Hammett to Oreana, Idaho. Unpublished , Idaho State University, Pocatello, 334 p.Google Scholar
Enlows, H. E. 1976. Petrography of the Rattlesnake Formation at the type area, central Oregon. Department of Geology and Mineral Industries, State of Oregon, Oil and Gas Investigations, 25: 134.Google Scholar
Flynn, J. J. and Jacobs, L. L. 2008. Castoroidea, p. 391405. In Janis, C. M., Gunnell, G. F. and Uhen, M. D. (eds.), Evolution of Tertiary Mammals of North America Vol. 2: Small Mammals, Xenarthrans, and Marine Mammals. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fremd, T. J., Bestland, E. A., and Retallack, G. J. 1994. John Day Basin paleontology field trip guide and road log. Prepared for 54th Annual Meeting, Society of Vertebrate Paleontology, 80 p.Google Scholar
Furlong, E. L. 1932. A new genus of otter from the Pliocene of the northern Great Basin province. Carnegie Institution of Washington Publication, 418: 93103.Google Scholar
Gray, J. E. 1821. On the natural arrangement of vertebrose animals. The London Medical Repository Monthly Journal and Review, 15: 296310.Google Scholar
Gustafson, E. P. 1978. The vertebrate faunas of the Pliocene Ringold Formation, south-central Washington. Bulletin No. 23, Museum of Natural History. University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon, 62 p.Google Scholar
Hemprich, W. 1820. Grundriss der Naturgeschichte für höhere Lehranstalten Entworfen von Dr. W. Hemprich. Berlin: August Rucker: Vienna: Friedrich Volke.Google Scholar
Hibbard, C. W. and Riggs, E. S. 1949. Upper Pliocene vertebrates from Keefe Canyon, Meade County, Kansas. Geological Society of America Bulletin, 60: 829860.Google Scholar
Hosford Scheirer, A. and Magoon, L. B. 2007. Age, distribution, and stratigraphic relationship of rock units in the San Joaquin Basin Province, California, Chapter 5 in Petroleum systems and geologic assessment of oil and gas in the San Joaquin Basin Province, California: United States Geological Survey Professional Paper 1713, 107 p.Google Scholar
Hugueney, M. and Escuillié, F. 1996. Fossil evidence for the origin of behavioral strategies in early Miocene Castoridae, and their role in the evolution of the family. Paleobiology, 22: 507513.Google Scholar
Hugueney, M. 1999. Family Castoridae, p. 281300. In Rössner, G. E. and Heissig, K. (eds), The Miocene Land Mammals of Europe. Münich: Verlag Friedrich Pfeil.Google Scholar
Hünermann, K. A. 1966. Der Bau des Biber-Praemolaren und seine Verwendbarkeit für die Systematik der Castoridae (Rodentia, Mammalia). Neues Jahrbuch für Geologie und Paläontologie Abhandlungen, 125: 227234.Google Scholar
Janis, C. M., Gunnell, G. F., and Uhen, M. D. 2008. Evolution of Tertiary Mammals of North America Vol. 2: Small Mammals, Xenarthrans, and Marine Mammals. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK and New York, 795 p.Google Scholar
Kellogg, L. 1911. A fossil beaver from the Kettleman hills, California. University of California publications, Bulletin of the Department of Geology, 6: 401402.Google Scholar
Korth, W. W. 1994. The Tertiary Record of Rodents in North America. Plenum Press, New York, 319 p.Google Scholar
Korth, W. W. and Rybczynski, N. 2003. A new, unusual castorid (Rodentia) from the earliest Miocene of Nebraska. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, 23: 667675.Google Scholar
Kuhl, H. 1820. Beitrage zur zoologie und vergleichenden anatomie, p. 64. Verlag der Hermannschen Buchandlung, Frankfurt am Main, Abt 1, 151 p.Google Scholar
Linnaeus, C. 1758. Systema naturae per egna tria naturae, secundum classes, ordines, genera, species, cum characteribus, differentiis, synonymis, locis. Vol. 1: Regnum animale. Editio decimal, 1758, Societatis Zoologicae Germanicae, Stockholm.Google Scholar
Lönnberg, E. 1909. A study of the variation of European beavers. Arkiv för Zoologi, 5: 116.Google Scholar
Martin, J. E. 1983. Additions to the early Hemphillian (Miocene) Rattlesnake Fauna from central Oregon. Proceedings of the South Dakota Academy of Science, 62: 2333.Google Scholar
Martin, J. E. 1996. Investigation of the late Miocene (Hemphillian) Rattlesnake Formation on lands administered by the Bureau of Land Management, Picture Gorge area, central Oregon. Unpublished report, Bureau of Land Management, Prineville District Office, 22 p.Google Scholar
Martin, J. E. 2008. Hemphillian rodents from northern Oregon and their biostratigraphic implications. Paludicola, 6: 115190.Google Scholar
Martin, L. D. 1987. Beavers from the Harrison Formation (early Miocene) with a revision of Euhapsis. Dakoterra, 3: 7391.Google Scholar
Martin, L. D. 1989. Plio-Pleistocene rodents in North America, p. 4758. In Black, C. C. and Dawson, M. R. (eds.), Papers on Fossil Rodents in Honor of Albert Elmer Wood, Science Series No. 33. Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County, Los Angeles, CA.Google Scholar
Martin, L. D. and Bennett, D. K. 1977. The burrows of the Miocene beaver Palaeocastor, western Nebraska, U.S.A. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 22: 173193.Google Scholar
Martin, J. E. and Fremd, T. J. 2001. Revision of the lithostratigraphy of the Hemphillian Rattlesnake units of central Oregon. PaleoBios, 21: 89.Google Scholar
Matthew, W. D. 1932. New fossil mammals from the Snake Creek quarries. American Museum Novitates, 540: 18.Google Scholar
Mckenna, M. C. and Bell, S. K. 1997. Classification of Mammals above the Species Level. Columbia University Press, New York, 631 p.Google Scholar
Merriam, J. C. 1901. A contribution to the geology of the John Day Basin. University of California, Publication of Department of Geological Sciences, 2: 269314.Google Scholar
Merriam, J. C., Stock, C., and Moody, C. L. 1916. An American Pliocene bear (Rattlesnake beds, John Day region, Oregon). University of California Publications, Bulletin of the Department of Geology, 10: 87109.Google Scholar
Merriam, J. C., Stock, C., and Moody, C. L. 1925. The Pliocene Rattlesnake Formation and fauna of eastern Oregon, with notes on the geology of the Rattlesnake and Mascall deposits. Carnegie Institution of Washington, Contributions to Palaeontology, 347: 4392.Google Scholar
Müller-Schwarze, D. and Sun, L. 2003. The Beaver—Natural History of a Wetlands Engineer. Cornell University Press, Ithaca, NY, 190 p.Google Scholar
Naiman, R. J., Johnston, C. A., and Kelley, J. C. 1988. Alteration of North American streams by beaver. BioScience, 38: 753762.Google Scholar
Obradovich, J. D., Naeser, C. W., and Izett, G. A. 1978. Geochronology of late Neogene marine strata in California. In Correlation of tropical through high latitude marine Neogene deposits of the Pacific basin. Stanford University Publications, Geological Sciences, 14: 4041.Google Scholar
Pilgrim, G. 1913. The correlation of the Siwaliks with mammal horizons of Europe. Records of the Geological Society of India, 43: 264326.Google Scholar
Prothero, D. R., Hoffman, J. M., and Foss, S. E. 2006. Magnetic stratigraphy of the upper Miocene (Hemphillian) Rattlesnake Formation, central Oregon. PaleoBios, 26: 3742.Google Scholar
Repenning, C. A., Weasma, T. R., and Scott, G. R. 1995. The early Pleistocene (latest Blancan-earliest Irvingtonian) Froman Ferry Fauna and history of the Glenns Ferry Formation, southwestern Idaho. U.S. Geological Survey, Bulletin, 2105: 179.Google Scholar
Retallack, G. J. 1999. Paleosols and paleoenvironments of the Rattlesnake Formation (late Miocene) near Dayville, Oregon. Final report, National Park Service, John Day Fossil Beds National Monument, #1443-PX9325-99-005, 61 p.Google Scholar
Retallack, G. J., Tanaka, S., and Tate, T. 2002. Late Miocene advent of tall grassland paleosols in Oregon. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 183: 329354.Google Scholar
Rosell, R., Bozsér, O., Collen, P., and Parker, H. 2005. Ecological impact of beavers Castor fiber and Castor canadensis and their ability to modify ecosystems. Mammal Review, 35: 248276.Google Scholar
Ruez, D. R. Jr. 2009. Revision of the Blancan (Pliocene) mammals from Hagerman Fossil Beds National Monument, Idaho. Journal of the Idaho Academy of Sciences, 45: 1143.Google Scholar
Rybczynski, N. 2007. Castorid phylogenetics: implications for the evolution of tree-exploitation by beavers. Journal of Mammalian Evolution, 14: 135.Google Scholar
Rybczynski, N. 2008. Woodcutting behavior in beavers (Castoridae, Rodentia): estimating ecological performance in a modern and a fossil taxon. Paleobiology, 34: 389402.Google Scholar
Rybczynski, N., Ross, E. M., Samuels, J. X., and Korth, W. 2010. Reevaluation of Sinocastor (Rodentia: Castoridae) with implications on the origin of modern beavers. PLoS ONE 5(11): e13990.Google Scholar
Samuels, J. X. 2009. Cranial morphology and dietary habits of rodents. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 156: 864888.Google Scholar
Samuels, J. X. and Van Valkenburgh, B. 2008. Skeletal indicators of locomotor adaptations in living and extinct rodents. Journal of Morphology, 269: 13871411.Google Scholar
Samuels, J. X. and Van Valkenburgh, B. 2009. Craniodental adaptations for digging in extinct Burrowing Beavers. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, 29: 254268.Google Scholar
Sarna-Wojcicki, A. M., Lajoie, K. R., Meyer, C. E., Adam, D. P., and Eieck, H. J. 1991. Tephrochronologic correlation of upper Neogene sediments along the Pacific margin, conterminous United States, p. 117140. In Morrison, R. B. (ed.), Quaternary Nonglacial Geology: Conterminous U.S., The Geology of North America, Vol. K-2. The Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO.Google Scholar
Schlosser, M. 1902. Beitrage zur Kenntnis der Säugertierreste aus den Süddeutschen Bohnerzen. Geologische und Paläontologische Abhandlungen, 9: 117259.Google Scholar
Shotwell, J. A. 1955. Review of the Pliocene beaver Dipoides. Journal of Paleontology, 29: 129144.Google Scholar
Shotwell, J. A. 1956. Hemphillian mammalian assemblage from northeastern Oregon. Bulletin of the Geological Society of America, 67: 717738.Google Scholar
Shotwell, J. A. 1970. Pliocene mammals of southeast Oregon and adjacent Idaho. University of Oregon Museum of Natural History Bulletin, 17: 1103.Google Scholar
Skinner, M. F., Skinner, S. M., and Gooris, R. J. 1977. Stratigraphy and biostratigraphy of late Cenozoic deposits in central Sioux County, western Nebraska. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History, 158: 263370.Google Scholar
Stefen, C. 2009. Intraspecific variability of beaver teeth (Castoridae: Rodentia). Zoological Journal of the Linnaean Society, 155: 926936.Google Scholar
Stirton, R. A. 1935. A review of the Tertiary beavers. Bulletin of the Department of Geological Sciences, 23: 391485.Google Scholar
Stirton, R. A. 1947. Observations on evolutionary rates of hypsodonty. Evolution, 1: 3241.Google Scholar
Streck, M. J. and Grunder, A. L. 1995. Crystallization and welding variations in a widespread ignimbrite sheet: the Rattlesnake Tuff, eastern Oregon, U.S.A. Bulletin of Volcanology, 57: 151169.Google Scholar
Tedford, R. H., Albright, L. B. III, Barnosky, A. D., Ferrusquia Villafranca, I., Hunt, R. M. Jr., Storer, J. E., Swisher, C. C. III, Voorhies, M. R., Webb, S. D., and Whistler, D. P. 2004. Mammalian biochronology of the Arikareean through Hemphillian interval (late Oligocene through early Pliocene Epochs), p. 169231. In Woodburne, M. O. (ed.), Late Cretaceous and Cenozoic Mammals of North America. Columbia University Press, New York.Google Scholar
Thorpe, M. R. 1921. Two new fossil Carnivora. American Journal of Science, 1: 477483.Google Scholar
Van Tassell, J., Bergey, E., Davis, C., Davis, M., Grimshaw, B., Kisselburg, J., Ledgerwood, R., Miller, S., Morris, C., Steele, J., Wehymiller, C., Ferns, M. L., Smith, G. R., Mcdonald, H. G., Mead, J. I., and Martin, R. A. 2007. Early Pliocene (Blancan) Always Welcome Inn local fauna, Baker City, Oregon. Oregon Geology, 68: 323.Google Scholar
Voorhies, M. R. 1990. Vertebrate biostratigraphy of the Ogallala Group in Nebraska, p. 115151. In Gustavson, T. C. (ed.), Geologic framework and regional hydrology: Upper Cenozoic Backwater Draw and Ogallala Formations, Great Plains. Bureau of Economic Geology, University of Texas, Austin.Google Scholar
Wagner, A. 1858. Geschichte der Urwelt, mit besonderer Berücksichtigung der Menschenrassen und des mosaischen Schöpfungsberichtes (2nd edition). Leopold Voss, Leipzig, 528 p.Google Scholar
Walker, G. W. 1979. Revisions to the Cenozoic stratigraphy of Harney Basin, southeastern Oregon. Bulletin U.S. Geological Survey, 1475: 135.Google Scholar
Walker, G. W. 1990. Miocene and younger rocks of the Blue Mountains region, exclusive of the Columbia River Basalt Group and associated mafic lava flows, p. 101118. In Walker, G.W. (ed.), Geology of the Blue Mountain Region of Oregon, Idaho and Washington: Cenozoic Geology of the Blue Mountains Region. U.S. Geological Survey, Professional Paper 1437.Google Scholar
Wilson, R. W. 1933. A rodent fauna from later Cenozoic beds of southwestern Idaho. Contributions to Paleontology, Carnegie Institute of Washington publication, 440: 117135.Google Scholar
Wilson, R. W. 1934. A new species of Dipoides from the Pliocene of eastern Oregon. Contributions to Paleontology, Carnegie Institute of Washington publication, 453: 1928.Google Scholar
Wilson, R. W. 1937. New middle Pliocene rodent and lagomorph faunas from Oregon and California. Carnegie Institute of Washington publication, 487: 119.Google Scholar
Wood, H. E. Jr., Chaney, R. W., Clark, J., Colbert, E. H., Jepsen, G. L., Reeside, J. B. Jr., and Stock, C. 1941. Nomenclature and correlation of the North American continental Tertiary. Bulletin Geological Society of America, 52: 148.Google Scholar
Woodburne, M. O. 2004. Global events and the North American mammalian biochronology, p. 315343. In Woodburne, M. O. (ed.), Late Cretaceous and Cenozoic Mammals of North America. Columbia University Press, New York.Google Scholar
Wright, J. P. and Jones, C. G. 2002. An ecosystem engineer, the beaver increases species richness at the landscape scale. Oecologia, 132: 96101.Google Scholar
Xu, X. 1994. Evolution of Chinese Castoridae, p. 7797. In Tomida, Y., Li, C. K., and Setoguchi, T. (eds.), Rodent and Lagomorph Families of Asian Origins and Diversification. National Science Museum Monographs, Tokyo.Google Scholar
Zakrzewski, R. J. 1969. The rodents from the Hagerman Local Fauna, upper Pliocene of Idaho. Contributions from the Museum of Paleontology, the University of Michigan, 23: 136.Google Scholar