2008-03-24 23:21:13 Xinhua English
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BEIJING, March 25 (Xinhuanet) -- Tiny foot bones from a 53 million-year-old rabbit ancestor discovered in India are the oldest known of animals that hop and their closest evolutionary relations, according to a new study.
The ankle and heel bones were discovered in a coal mine in Gujarat, in west-central India, and recently found by a team of paleontologists to belong to the Lagomorpha, a classification of mammals that includes modern-day rabbits, hares and pikas (pikas are hamster-sized rabbit cousins).
"This is 35 million years older than anything that's ever been called a lagomorph on India, totally unexpected," said lead researcher Kenneth Rose, a professor in the Center for Functional Anatomy and Evolution at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore. "Undoubtedly it's a new species; undoubtedly it's a new genus; it could even be a new family."
The rodent would have been much smaller than the classic Easter bunny, about the size of a hamster, weighing well under a half pound (less than 100 grams). The bones were found embedded in material deposited in land once covered with swamps and bays near a shore, suggesting the animal may have lived in some sort of near-shore environment.
Detailed online recently in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B, the new lagomorph would also be the earliest known mammal identified in India from the Cenozoic era, the Age of Mammals, which occurred after the extinction event that wiped out non-avian dinosaurs, Rose said.
Rose's analysis of the Indian foot bones involved comparing them with eight living species of rabbits and hares, as well as two species of pika, which live today in the Rocky Mountains and other mountainous regions.
Rose's team found the bones, which are four to five times smaller than those of modern-day jackrabbits, resemble pikas in some of their primitive features. But unlike pikas, which don't hop, the bones showed some advanced features that would've made this rabbit-like animal quite a hopper.
"These foot bones look more like cottontail [rabbit] foot bones," Rose told LiveScience. "They're from some more specialized, little running, jumping lagomorph."
(Agencies)