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Amphiperatherium is an of , closely related to . It ranged from the to the in . It is the most recent metatherian known from the .


Description
Like modern , to which it was distantly related, this had a 15 centimeters long body and a 17 centimeters long tail. Its body size was relatively larger than some of its earlier relatives, such as , but its tail was proportionally shorter.

Amphiperatherium minutum is to have possessed transverse crista in the stylar shelf of its maxillary molars, a feature seen in many other metatherians.


Classification
Amphiperatherium is part of an evolutionary radiation of opossum-like metatherians, known as , typical of the Early of , and , currently considered either the most primitive of all marsupials, or the sister taxon of . Amphiperatherium was not only the more recent herpetotheriid known, but also the last marsupial known in Europe, becoming extinct during the Middle Miocene, 15 millions of years ago. Its extinction coincided with a general cooling of the European climate, which seems to have been the fatal blow for the herpetotheriids, adapted to milder climates.

The genus was first described by Filhol in 1879, based on material found in , but additional fossils were later found in , , , and , the genus surviving for 35 millions of years, from the Early Eocene to the Late Miocene. Amphiperatherium must have been an evolutionary success, allowing the genus to survive for millions of years without undergoing important changes. Among the best known species are Amphiperatherium bourdellense, A. exile, A. fontense, A. minutum and A. frequens, the last surviving species from the Middle Miocene. It was related to the European genus and the American genus .


Palaeoecology
The morphological characteristics of Amphiperatherium indicates that, unlike similar but smaller genera such as Peradectes, spent most of its time on the ground. Some features of its skeletons, however, such as its prehensile tail, indicates that it was at least a partially arboreal animal, consuming a large variety of foods, including small animals and plants.


Bibliography
  • J. J. Hooker. 1996. Mammals from the Early (late Ypresian) to Middle (Lutetian) Eocene Bracklesham Group, southern England. Tertiary Research 16(1-4):141-174
  • Furió, M., Ruiz-Sánchez, F.J., Crespo, V.D., Freudenthal, M. & Montoya, P. (published online 2012). The southernmost Miocene occurrence of the last European herpetotheriid Amphiperatherium frequens (Metatheria, Mammalia). Comptes Rendus Palevol.

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