- Source: Rhinocerotoidea
Rhinocerotoidea is a superfamily of perissodactyls that appeared 56 million years ago in the Paleocene. They included four extinct families, the Amynodontidae, the Hyracodontidae, the Paraceratheriidae, and the Eggysodontidae. The only extant family is the Rhinocerotidae (true rhinoceroses), which survives as five living species. Extinct non-rhinocerotid members of the group are sometimes considered rhinoceroses in a broad sense. Although the term 'rhinoceroses' is sometimes used to refer to all of these, a less ambiguous vernacular term for this group is 'rhinocerotoids'. The family Paraceratheriidae contains the largest land mammals known to have ever existed.
Taxonomy
The cladogram below follows a phylogenetic analysis by Bai et al. (2020):
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Badak
- Paraceratherium
- Rhinocerotoidea
- Perissodactyla
- Paraceratherium
- Tapiroidea
- Rhinoceros
- Eggysodontidae
- Menoceras
- Parahippus
- Hesperotherium
- Eohippus