The pardel lynx Lynx pardinus is today restricted to small populations living in southern Iberian Peninsula. However, this endangered species was widely spread throughout Iberia until historical times and is currently the subject of intense conservation programs. Paleontological data suggest that its past geographical range was much wider, including also southern France and northern Italy. Here, we report exceptionally preserved fossil remains of L. pardinus from the Late Pleistocene (about 40′000 years) of Ingarano (Italy), which represent the largest sample of fossil lynx currently known in Europe. This new evidence allows (1) to revise the taxonomy of European fossil lynxes, (2) to extend far southeast the paleobiogeographical distribution of L. pardinus, and (3) to offer new insights on the evolutionary history (e.g., relationships with other extinct and extant lynx species) and paleobiology (e.g., intraspecific variation, body mass) of this iconic European felid.
The tale of a short-tailed cat: New outstanding Late Pleistocene fossils of Lynx pardinus from southern Italy / B. Mecozzi, R. Sardella, A. Boscaini, M. Cherin, L. Costeur, J. Madurell-Malapeira, M. Pavia, A. Profico, D.A. Iurino. - In: QUATERNARY SCIENCE REVIEWS. - ISSN 0277-3791. - 262:(2021), pp. 106840.1-106840.17. [10.1016/j.quascirev.2021.106840]
The tale of a short-tailed cat: New outstanding Late Pleistocene fossils of Lynx pardinus from southern Italy
D.A. Iurino
Ultimo
Writing – Original Draft Preparation
2021
Abstract
The pardel lynx Lynx pardinus is today restricted to small populations living in southern Iberian Peninsula. However, this endangered species was widely spread throughout Iberia until historical times and is currently the subject of intense conservation programs. Paleontological data suggest that its past geographical range was much wider, including also southern France and northern Italy. Here, we report exceptionally preserved fossil remains of L. pardinus from the Late Pleistocene (about 40′000 years) of Ingarano (Italy), which represent the largest sample of fossil lynx currently known in Europe. This new evidence allows (1) to revise the taxonomy of European fossil lynxes, (2) to extend far southeast the paleobiogeographical distribution of L. pardinus, and (3) to offer new insights on the evolutionary history (e.g., relationships with other extinct and extant lynx species) and paleobiology (e.g., intraspecific variation, body mass) of this iconic European felid.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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