2012
DOI: 10.1007/s10914-012-9189-y
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Recent Advances on Variability, Morpho-Functional Adaptations, Dental Terminology, and Evolution of Sloths

Abstract: The occasion of the Xenarthra Symposium during the ICVM 9 meeting allowed us to reflect on the considerable advances in the knowledge of sloths made by the "Xcommunity" over the past two decades, particularly in such aspects as locomotion, mastication, diet, dental terminology, intraspecific variation, sexual dimorphism, and phylogenetic relationships. These advancements have largely been made possible by the application of cladistic methodology (including DNA analyses) and the discovery of peculiar forms such… Show more

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Cited by 62 publications
(80 citation statements)
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“…The main study subject is the phylogenetic tree proposed by Pujos et al (2012), complemented by those of Pujos et al (2007) and Gaudin (2004). While the current report was in review, Amson et al (2016) provided a new phylogenetic hypothesis, in which thalassocnines were removed from Nothrotheriinae and presented as closely related to Megatheriinae.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 88%
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“…The main study subject is the phylogenetic tree proposed by Pujos et al (2012), complemented by those of Pujos et al (2007) and Gaudin (2004). While the current report was in review, Amson et al (2016) provided a new phylogenetic hypothesis, in which thalassocnines were removed from Nothrotheriinae and presented as closely related to Megatheriinae.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 88%
“…This optimisation, resulting in a reduction of muscular mass in modern sloths, would not apply to most fossil sloths, as they were almost certainly more muscular (Bargo et al 2000;Vizcaíno et al 2006;Toledo et al 2013Toledo et al , 2015. Pujos et al (2012) optimised substrate preference categories of sloths in their cladogram, which supported previous proposals that the suspensory habits of extant sloths are convergent (Patterson & Pascual 1968;Webb 1985;Gaudin 2004;McDonald & De Iuliis 2008;Nyakatura et al 2010). These authors considered a terrestrial habit basal for all sloths, and reconstructed a basal semiarboreal substrate preference for megalonychids, megatheriids and nothrotheriids, as proposed previously by Webb (1985).…”
Section: Slothsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In two of the three modern genera, Phataginus (Kingdon, 1997) and Manis (Heath, 1992a(Heath, , 1995, the species broadly overlap in body size, and in Smutsia the giant pangolin is nearly twice the size of the ground pangolin (Kingdon, 1997). In the end, there are not enough specimens of Patriomanis to reliably discriminate among the various possibilities; indeed, distinguishing among individual differences, species-level differences, and gender-based differences remains a difficult problem for extinct taxa in general (see discussion in Pujos et al, 2012).…”
Section: Manual Ungualsmentioning
confidence: 99%