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   » » Wiki: Cyonasua
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Cyonasua
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Cyonasua (meaning "dog-coati" in ) is an extinct of from the to of South America. Fossils of Cyonasua have been found in (Ituzaingó, Epecuén, Huayquerías, Monte Hermoso, Chapadmalal, Maimará, Ensenada, La Playa, Chiquimil, Andalhuala, and Cerro Azul Formations), (Tariquía Formation), Uruguay (Camacho Formation), and (San Gregorio Formation). The oldest well-dated fossils of Cyonasua are approximately 7.3 million years old. Most fossils of Cyonasua are late to early late ( to SALMAs, 7.3-3 million years old) in age, but a single early specimen (the and only known specimen of Cyonasua meranii) indicates that members of this genus survived until at least 0.99 million years ago (the fossil layer where this specimen was collected dating to the Jaramillo Chron).

Cyonasua is the oldest terrestrial known from South America, and represents the earliest undisputed southward mammalian migrants of the Great American Interchange. Cyonasua appears in the fossil record much earlier than other immigrant groups, most of which did not appear until 3 million years ago, including other , many of which did not appear in South America until the early (about 1.2 million years ago). The next oldest remains of carnivorans in South America are rare specimens of and from the (~2.9 million years old), nearly 4.4 million years after the first appearance of Cyonasua in South America. The ancestors of Cyonasua are thought to have arrived from by before the formation of the Isthmus of Panama.

Cyonasua arrived in South America when ecosystems there were still dominated by carnivores, namely and carnivorous . Unlike most sparassodonts, which were , Cyonasua was an omnivore and it is thought that it did not directly compete with sparassodonts for food. This is thought to be one possible reason why Cyonasua and its close relatives were able to colonize South America many millions of years before other carnivorans. Because sparassodonts and other native predators like and were , and other predators such as were much smaller than most , the large, omnivorous Cyonasua could occupy an otherwise unoccupied in South American ecosystems.

Cyonasua was much larger than any extant procyonid, weighing about 15–25 kg, about the same size as a medium-sized dog. However, it was much smaller than its later relative , which was the size of a small bear.

(2025). 9783319037011, Springer.
is thought to have been closely related to Cyonasua, with the two genera frequently referred to as " Cyonasua-group procyonids". Chapalmalania is thought to have evolved from a species of Cyonasua in , with Cyonasua as traditionally defined potentially being .

Limb bones of Cyonasua suggest that this genus was a generalized terrestrial mammal with some capability to dig and climb, similar to ( Procyon) and ( Nasua). Fossils of Cyonasua have been found inside (fossil burrows), but these are thought to have been made by the large and later occupied by Cyonasua. The teeth of Cyonasua suggest it was omnivorous, more carnivorous than most living procyonids, but less carnivorous than the modern ringtails ()

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