taxonID	type	description	language	source
03CEDC4BEB64DE5FFF05F947FB529352.taxon	description	G e o l o g i c a l a g e: middle Miocene. S p e c i e s c o m p o s i t i o n: Trogontherium minutum minutum Meyer, 1938, Trogontherium minutum rhenanum Franzen, Storch, 1975, Trogontherium minutum ozansoyi (Ünay, 1975) and Euroxenomys minutus minutus from Sansan (Hugueney, Duranthon, 2012) described earlier as a separate genus. Remains of the nominative subspecies are known from the early Late Miocene (MN 9) of the Grytsev locality in Western Ukraine. Remains of Trogontherium (Euroxenomys) minutum rhenanum have been collected from the Late Miocene in the range of MN 10 (late Vallesian) — MN 13 (Turolian), i. e. during the time of existence of the Sarmatian- Pontian sea basins in the south of Eastern Europe. The subspecies Trogontherium minutum ozansoyi (= Steneofiber minutus ozanzoyi) was found in the Late Miocene (MN 12) strata of Catakbayaka, Turkey (Ünay, 1975). Morphometric parameters, separating these three subspecies of the genus Trogontherium based mainly on differences in the length of dentition, although they are also based on some other features. E. g., the length of the lower P 4 – M 3 dentition in Trogontherium (Euroxenomys) minutum minutum from Petersbuch is in the range of 11.0 – 13.0 mm, while it averages 13.0 mm (restored) in the subspecies Trogontherium (Euroxenomys) minutum rhenanum (Franzen, Storch, 1975). The restored length of the lower dentition P 4 – M 3 in Trogontherium minutum ozansoyi may be in the range of 10.0 – 11.0 mm. Special morphology of the P 4 also is a hallmark for this subspecies (Ünay, 1975).	en	Apoltsev, D. A., Rekovets, L. I. (2015): Beavers Of The Genus Trogontherium (Castoridae, Rodentia) From The Late Miocene Of Ukraine. Vestnik Zoologii 49 (6): 419-528, DOI: 10.1515/vzoo-2015-0062, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/vzoo-2015-0062
03CEDC4BEB67DE5EFF0DFCC8FD2996B1.taxon	description	G e o l o g i c a l a g e: MN 9, middle Sarmatian (Vallesian). According to Lychev (1973, 1983), fossil remains of T. (Euroxenomys) minutum from the Late Miocene of Ukraine, including the material from Grytsev, are belonging to Monosaulax savinovi, typical North American and Asian species. Molars from Grytsev (fig. 1, 3) have relatively smaller crowns and less-developed roots than those in Monosaulax savinovi, which was described from the Miocene of Kazakhstan. D e s c r i p t i o n a n d c o m p a r i s o n. Skull fragment has full dentition — 2 P 4 and M 1 - 3. Palate without expressed median crest, its posterior part is broken; the smallest palatal width between the P 4 alveoli — 2.3 mm, and between the M 1 alveoli — 4.5 mm. Alveolar length of the P 4 – M 3 is 12.4 mm, coronary length — 12.2 mm. Teeth without cement have well-developed roots, hypostriae and hypoflexus. Mesofossette is convex, other fossettes are nearly straight. There is a fourth fossette on M 3. P 4, M 1, and incisor are preserved in front of the mandible. Coronoid process and the back part of the mandible are broken down to M 2. Teeth with greatly developed hypostriids and hypoflexids do not have cement; length of diastema is 9.1 mm, the restored height at P 4 — 13.0 mm. For comparison, these values on material from Petersbuch are 8.87 and 20.05 mm, respectively (Stefen, Rummel, 2003). The fragment of triangular lower incisor has a weak curvature; the enamel slightly covers the lateral surface. Enamel anterior side is convex. Incisor width is 3.4 mm, anteroposterior diameter — 3.9 mm. Average length of the P 4 is 4.1 mm, width — 4.5 mm (the length ratio — 109 %). The tooth is medium-worn. Para- and hypoflexi are straight and contrasted (not shifted) at the middle part of the tooth. Mesoflexus crosses the entire width of the chewing surface and has a slight bend. According to these features, P 4 from Grytsev is inferior in size compared to teeth from Petersbuch, and Trogontherium minutum ozansoyi (Ünay, 1975) from the Late Miocene of Turkey. Length of M 1 - 2 is 2.4 mm, width — 2.9 mm (W / L ratio is 120 %). Parafossette is small, shifted to edge of the chewing surface and opposed to the hypoflexus. Metaflexus is under closure into fossette. The subspecies from Petersbuch has a markedly larger size of these teeth with a W / L ratio of 159.0 %. Perhaps, this is due to different degrees of the tooth wear (Stefen, Rummel, 2003). Length of M 3 is 3.1 mm, width — 2.9 mm (W / L ratio — 93 %). The teeth are shaped like an elongated triangle, which distinguishes the genus Trogontherium from others. Paraflexus is in the process of circuit into a fossette, slightly shifted in direction to the hypoflexus. Mesofossette is straight, stretched out over the entire tooth width. Dimensional parameters of the M 3 from Grytsev are less than those from Petersbuch, as well as from the Late Miocene of Turkey. At the same time its W / L ratio remains almost in the range of 75 – 93 % (table 1). Length of P 4 is 4.0 mm, width — 3.0 mm, W / L ratio — 75.0 %. Anterior part of the tooth is trapezoidal (not rectangular) unlike Trogontherium minutum ozansoyi, and the hypoflexus is not parallel to the labial side of the tooth. Four M 1 - 2 with weak roots belong to adult individuals (fig. 1, 3); maximum crown height — 6.7; 7.0; 7.0; 7.3 mm, hypostriid height — 3.3; 3.4; 3.5; 3.6 mm, mesostriid height — 1.3; 1.4; 1.4; 1.6 mm. There are well-developed meso- and paraflexids, metafossetids on the chewing surfaces. The length exceeds the width (3.4 × 2.7 mm, W / L ratio — 79.4 %; 3.4 × 3.0 mm, W / L — 88.2 %; 3.5 × 2.7 mm, W / L — 77.1 %). Two M 3 with well-marked four half-fused roots belong to adult individuals. Tooth height is 6.0 and 5.3 mm; hypostriid (2.4 and 2.0 mm) is well expressed, the mesostriid length is 0.9 and 1.7 mm. There are meta- and parafossetids on the crown surface; mesoflexid is weak (narrow and short) unlike the hypoflexid. Tooth length is 3.2 and 2.8 mm, width — 3.2 and 2.8 mm, W / L ratio is 100 %. R e m a r k s. P 4 from Petersbuch are on average about 5 – 7 % larger than those from Grytsev. M 1 - 2, conversely, are larger in Grytsev versus those from Petersbuch. P 4 and M 3 from Petersbuch are larger than those from Grytsev. M 1 - 2 from Grytsev are longer and less wide than those from Petersbuch. M 3 are not represented in materials from Petersbuch, thus it is not possible to compare these teeth.	en	Apoltsev, D. A., Rekovets, L. I. (2015): Beavers Of The Genus Trogontherium (Castoridae, Rodentia) From The Late Miocene Of Ukraine. Vestnik Zoologii 49 (6): 419-528, DOI: 10.1515/vzoo-2015-0062, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/vzoo-2015-0062
03CEDC4BEB66DE5AFF05F968FC869691.taxon	description	I n v e s t i g a t e d m a t e r i a l. Mikhailovka 2 (MN 11): 1 M 1 - 2, dP 4; Popovo 3 (MN 12): 1 dP 4; Cherevichnoe 3 (MN 12): 1 P 4, 1 dP 4, 1 mandible with P 4 - M 2 (fig. 2), 2 M 1 - 2, 1 P 4 (fig. 3, 8), 5 M 1 - 2, 3 M 3; Belka (MN 12): 1 M 3; Nikomarovka: 1 M 1 - 2; Novoelizavetovka 2: 1 M 1 - 2; Vinogradovka 1: М 1 - 2 — 5, М 3 — 2, Р 4 — 3, М 1 - 2 — 7; Pontian lectostratotype: Р 4 — 5, М 1 - 2 — 2, М 3 — 3, Р 4 — 3, М 1 - 2 — 5; Andreevka: Р 4 — 1, М 1 - 2 — 2, М 3 — 2, Р 4 — 2, М 1 - 2 — 4. G e o l o g i c a l a g e: MN 10 – 13, Late Miocene (Turolian). The earliest representatives of the T. (Euroxenomys) minutum rhenanum in Ukraine are known from the Mikhailovka 1 and 2 locality. D e s c r i p t i o n a n d c o m p a r i s o n. P 4 from the numerous localities on the territory of Ukraine (fig. 3, 1) are characterized by a somewhat larger size as compared to the nominative subspecies and those from Dorn-Dürkheim. The height of the tooth crown is on average 4.2 mm (maximum — up to 8.0 mm), length — within the range of 3.6 – 5.3 mm, width — 4.1 – 6.1 mm, and W / L ratio is 110 % (table 1). The widest teeth are observed in materials from Mikhailovka on Bug 2 and Verkhnya Krynitsa 2 (W / L ratio — 115.0 %). Hypostria usually reach the crown bottom, mesostria is long; flexus closed into the fossettes in early stages of wear; parafossette and metafossette are insular-shape. Tooth size of the subspecies from Dorn-Dürkheim is similar, but the latter have almost the same length and width (W / L ratio — 98 %). Length of the dP 4 from Vinogradovka 1 is 2.9 mm, width — 3.0 mm (W / L = 103 %), the height of the tooth crown is 4.6 mm. Paraflexus tends to branching, mesoflexus crosses the entire width of the chewing surface, metafossette is circular. Apex of the hypoflexus reaches the middle part of the chewing surface, para- and mesostriae are weak, hypostria reaches the crown bottom. Height of M 1 - 2 from Andreevka, Vinogradovka 1 and Pontian lectostratotype is on average 8.0 mm, length — near 3.5 mm, width is 4.0 mm (W / L ratio — 114 %). Parafossette and mesofossette are well-expressed (fig. 3, 2, 3); hypofossette is shifted to the labial edge, while its lingual side docks with the labial edge. Parafossette is sometimes small and short in buccal-lingual direction, hypostria ends below half of the crown height. Insular-shape hypofossette is often small, slightly elongated, and located parallel with the parafossette. Paraflexus reaches half of the chewing surface width in contact with hypoflexus. Lingual edge of mesoflexus almost reaches the edge of the chewing surface. Metafossette is oval. Meso- and metastries are weak and hardly noticeable. One M 1 - 2 from Frunzovka 2 is slightly different in size and morphology: L = 5.5 mm, W = 3.8 mm (W / L ratio — 69.1 %), i. e. the tooth is longer than wider. Elongated M 3 with well-developed roots from Belka, Andreevka (fig. 3, 4), Pontian lectostratotype are relatively large (L in the range of 4.0 – 5.5 mm, W = 3.3 – 4.0 mm, the average index — 75 %). Parafossette is located transversely with hypostriid, mesostria is long, ends by less than half of the crown height. Metafossette is Y-shaped; there are two small additional fossetids. There is a small additional fossette under the parafossette, from the labial tooth side; mesoflexus is not closed, there are two small fossettes at the bottom of metaflexus. Hypostria reaches extends about nearly 2 / 3 of the crown height. Teeth from the Pontian lectostratotype have an oblong parafossette and a long arched mesofossette. Metafossette disposed substantially parallel to the longitudinal axis of the chewing surface. There is an additional (fourth) fossette inside the bend of metafossette. M 3 from Belka is shorter and wider than those from Dorn-Dürkheim, while inferior in the size of the teeth from the Pontian lectostratotype. M 3 from Andreevka is smaller than those from the Pontian lectostratotype and Dorn-Dürkheim. M 3 length from Vinogradovka 1 is 3.0 mm, width — 2.2 mm, crown height is 6.4 mm. The tooth is slightly worn; paracone is insular (isolated). Parafossette in the teeth from the Pontian lectostratotype is located on the labial tooth side; mesofossette is expressed across the entire width of the chewing surface and permanently bonded to the front part of the tooth. The metafossette is slightly curved. Additional fossettes, different in form, are located down. Hypostria reaches 1 / 3 of the crown height. P 4 morphology of the studied subspecies from the Late Miocene localities are divided into two groups — early or small, including the remains from MN 11 – 12, and late or larger — MN 13. Differences between them are stored mainly in terms of size. Tooth length of the early Maeotian (MN 11 – 12) populations is in the range of 5.1 – 5.7 mm, width — 4.1 – 4.6 mm, W / L ratio is 80 %. The larger tooth size is characteristic for the populations, dated by the Pontian (MN 13): 6.0 × 4.3 mm in average, W / L ratio — 71.5 %. Beavers from Andreevka, Vinogradovka 1 and Pontian lectostratotype have less broad teeth and reflect a general trend to P 4 elongation in time. The population from Dorn-Dürkheim takes an intermediate position: under size (6.2 × 4.8 mm) it is closer to those from the Pontian lectostratotype; however under the W / L ratio (77 %) it is similar to Maeotian populations. Height of the tooth crown is in the range of 8.0 – 9.0 mm, roots are moderately developed. Parafossetid is elongated and slightly curved, mesoflexid is straight, and metafossetid is located on the labial tooth side and similar in shape and size to parafossetid. Hypoflexid abuts by the labial edge into the lingual edge of metafossetid. Mesostriid reaches 2 / 3 of the crown height. Occasionally there is an additional rounded fossetid between para- and mesoflexids. A slightly different P 4 morphology is peculiar for the remains from Andreevka (fig. 3, 5). Tooth length is 6.7 mm, width — 4.5 mm (W / L index — 67 %). There is an additional fossetid in the front part of the tooth; other fossetids have approximately the same shape. Hypoflexus comes on the chewing surface between the mesofossetid and metafossetid; hypostriid reaches the bottom of the crown, and the height of the crown is 5.2 mm. Tooth roots are greatly developed, exceeding the crown height. M 1 - 2 of this subspecies from the Maeotian localities of Ukraine belongs to adult individuals (fig. 3, 6, 7). They have poorly developed roots; there is no cement at the crown base. Crowns are slightly curved, their average height is 8.0 mm, hypostriid length — 3.9 mm, parastriid height is 0.1 mm, mesostriid — 1.2 mm. Metafossetid is somewhat curved and well-expressed. There is a fourth (additional) fossetid that distinguishes it from other Palearctic subspecies. The tooth crown is almost square (W / L ratio is in the range of 97 – 100 %). Parafossetid on individual teeth, e. g. from the Verkhnya Krynitsa 2, shifted leftwards, mesoflexid comes under the lingual edge of the hypoflexid, metafossetid is well-expressed. Hypostriid lowered on ¾ of the crown height. Mesoflexid and metaflexid formed two (lingual and labial) striids in the process of crown wear. There is a small rounded fossetid below the metaflexid, in the middle part of the lower edge of hypoconid. Labial edge of the mesostriid is weakly expressed, lingual edge is very small. Metastriids and metaflexies are also hardly expressed. Hypostriid reaches more than half of the crown height. Remains of T. minutum minutum from Grytsev (MN 9) are similar to those from the Höwenegg locality in Germany (Giersch et al., 2010) in size of the lower molars as well as tooth proportions. Subspecies of Grytsev locality also has similar size with Euroxenomys minutus minutus from Sansan, but differs by narrower teeth, especially in the lower jaw, and relatively broader and shorter P 4 (109 % against 96.0 % for the subspecies from Sansan). Remains of T. minutum ozansoyi are closest to subspecies from Sansan in size and proportions of P 4 and M 1 - 2 (table 1). This group of remains includes the most ancient and most minor forms of the nominative subspecies; they differ from the later and larger subspecies T. minutum rhenanum. All teeth from the Maeotian localities are somewhat smaller as compared to those from Dorn-Dürkheim, Andreevka, Vinogradovka 1 and Pontian lectostratotype (table 1). Besides, typical series has wider teeth (W / L index — 122.0 %) unlike the Maeotian forms. M 1 - 2 are smaller in Maeotian localities (average length is 3.4 mm, width — 3.35 mm, W / L ratio is 97.0 %), i. e. teeth are clearly square. Teeth from the late Maeotian and Pontian localities (Andreevka, Vinogradovka 1, Pontian lectostratotype) are larger (average length is 3.5 mm, width — 4.4 mm, W / L ratio is 140 %), i. e. width is much greater than length. It is an important indicator, especially for the remains from the Vinogradovka 1. Height of the crowns is in the range of 6.0 – 8.0 mm. T. (Euroxenomys) minutum rhenanum from Ukraine differs under the marked morphological features from the type series of Dorn-Dürkheim, which is closer to the Pontian populations. M 1 - 2 from Andreevka are longer, but narrower than those from the Pontian lectostratotype. Besides, they are larger than those from Novoukrainka, Nikomarovka, and Verkhnya Krynitsa 2. M 1 - 2 from Andreevka is bigger than those from Dorn-Dürkheim, and wider than longer.	en	Apoltsev, D. A., Rekovets, L. I. (2015): Beavers Of The Genus Trogontherium (Castoridae, Rodentia) From The Late Miocene Of Ukraine. Vestnik Zoologii 49 (6): 419-528, DOI: 10.1515/vzoo-2015-0062, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/vzoo-2015-0062
