Coelodonta (, from the Ancient Greek κοῖλος ( koîlos), meaning "hollow", and οδούς ( odoús), meaning "tooth", in reference to the deep grooves of their molars) is an extinct genus of that lived from about 3.7 million years to 14,000 years ago, between the Pliocene and Pleistocene epochs. It is best known from the type species, the woolly rhinoceros ( Coelodonta antiquitatis), which ranged throughout northern Eurasia during the Pleistocene. The earliest known species, Coelodonta thibetana, lived in Tibet during the Pliocene, with the genus spreading to the rest of Eurasia during the Pleistocene.
Coelodonta presumably grew to be around 3.6m long and 1.7m tall.
Species
Species recognised as members of
Coelodonta, according to Deng
et al. (2011), include:
-
Coelodonta thibetana (Deng et al. 2011): The most primitive species of the genus, inhabited the Tibetan Plateau during the Pliocene.
-
Coelodonta nihowanensis (Chow, 1978): A primitive species from northern China, it lived in the earliest Pleistocene.
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Coelodonta tologoijensis (Beliajeva, 1966): Appeared in northern China around 2 million years ago, and was present in eastern Eurasia during the Early-Middle Pleistocene.
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Coelodonta antiquitatis (Blumenbach, 1799): The type species of the genus, commonly known as the woolly rhinoceros. It lived in the steppes of northern Eurasia during the Middle and Late Pleistocene, and was the last living representative of the genus.
Phylogeny
DNA evidence suggests that the Sumatran rhinoceros (
Dicerorhinus sumatrensis) is the closest living relative of
Coelodonta, with
Coelodonta also being closely related to the extinct genus
Stephanorhinus.
Cladogram of living and subfossil rhinoceros species based on nuclear DNA after Liu et al, 2021:
denotes extinct taxa
Bayesian morphological phylogeny (Pandolfi, 2023) Note: This excludes living African rhinoceros species.
External links