The oldest big cat fossils ever
found from a previously unknown species "similar to a snow leopard"
- have been unearthed in the Himalayas. Reports:
The skull fragments of the
newly-named Panthera blytheae have been dated between 4.1 and 5.95
million years old.
Their discovery in Tibet supports
the theory that big cats evolved in central Asia - not Africa - and spread
outward.
This ties up a lot of questions we
had on how big cats evolved and spread throughout the world”
Dr Jack Tseng University of Southern
California.
They used both anatomical and DNA
data to determine that the skulls belonged to an extinct big cat, whose territory
appears to overlap many of the species we know today.
"This cat is a sister of living
snow leopards - it has a broad forehead and a short face. But it's a little
smaller - the size of clouded leopards," said lead author Dr Jack Tseng of
the University of Southern California.
"This ties up a lot of
questions we had on how these animals evolved and spread throughout the world.
"Biologists had hypothesised
that big cats originated in Asia. But there was a division between the DNA data
and the fossil record."
The so-called "big cats" -
the Pantherinae subfamily - includes lions, jaguars, tigers, leopards, snow
leopards, and clouded leopards.
DNA evidence suggests they diverged
from their cousins the Felinae - which includes cougars, lynxes, and domestic
cats - about 6.37 million years ago.
But the earliest fossils previously
found were just 3.6 million years old - tooth fragments uncovered at Laetoli in
Tanzania, the famous hominin site excavated by Mary Leakey in the 1970s
The new fossils were dug up on an expedition in 2010 in the remote Zanda Basin in southwestern Tibet, by a team including Dr Tseng and his wife Juan Liu - a fellow palaeontologist.
They found over 100 bones deposited by a river eroding out of a cliff, including the crushed - but largely complete - remains of a big cat skull.
"We were very surprised to find a cat fossil in that basin," Dr Tseng told BBC News.
"Usually we find antelopes and rhinos, but this site was special. We found multiple carnivores - badgers, weasels and foxes."
Among the bones were seven skull fragments, belonging to at least three individual cats, including one nearly complete skull.
The fragments were dated using magnetostratigraphy - which relies on historical reversals in the Earth's magnetic field recorded in layers of rock.
They ranged between 4.10 and 5.95 million years old, the complete skull being around 4.4 million years of age.
"This is a very significant finding - it fills a very wide gap in the fossil record," said Dr Manabu Sakamoto of the University of Bristol, an expert on Pantherinae evolution.
"The discovery presents strong support for the Asian origin hypothesis for the big cats.
"It gives us a great insight into what early big cats may have looked like and where they may have lived."
However, Prof William Murphy of Texas A&M University, another expert on the evolutionary relationship of big cats, questioned whether the new species was really a sister of the snow leopard.
"The authors' claim that this skull is similar to the snow leopard is very weakly supported based on morphological characters alone, and this morphology-based tree is inconsistent with the DNA-based tree of living cats," he told BBC News.
"It remains equally probable that this fossil is ancestral to the living big cats. More complete skeletons would be beneficial to confirm their findings."
Dr Tseng and his team plan to return to the fossil site in Tibet next summer to search for more specimen
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