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1 December 2014 Loss of Ancient Diversity of Xenarthrans and the Value of Protecting Extant Armadillos, Sloths and Anteaters
Sergio F. Vizcaíno, M. Susana Bargo
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Armadillos, sloths and anteaters represent a small fragment of a much more diverse fossil assemblage of xenarthrans that includes bizarre forms such as the armored glyptodonts and the giant ground sloths. We reconstruct extinct xenarthrans as living animals, describing their basic biology, behaviors and ecological roles. In this contribution we provide two examples of the ecological diversity of xenarthrans in the geological past that largely surpass the one we know today. One is the Santacrucian fauna that developed in southern Patagonia during the Middle Miocene Climatic Optimum (17 to 15 Ma). The richness of Santacrucian xenarthrans recorded in a single locality comprises 21 genera in seven families, exceeding the present total diversity in the continent as a whole (14 genera within five families). The other is the Lujanian fauna that inhabited the Pampean Region during the late Quaternary (0.130 to 0.07 Ma). The total large mammal (above 100 kg) and megamammal (above a ton) richness during Lujanian times may have been as high as 83 species distributed in 48 genera. Most megaherbivores were xenarthrans, which constituted about 80% of the mammals above 500 kg: at least four genera of glyptodonts (Glyptodontidae) and five genera of ground sloths (Mylodontidae and Megatheriidae). There was also a giant armadillo-like herbivore that must have reached 200 kg (Pampatheriidae). This ancient diversity is lost forever, and we therefore urge that autochthony and past taxonomic richness and ecologic diversity be recognized as values for establishing conservation priorities and policies.

Introduction

Current molecular evidence indicates that the South American Xenarthra represent one of the four major clades of placental mammals, although a consensus on patterns of relationships has not been achieved (see Delsuc & Douzery, 2008; Asher & Helgen, 2010; Meredith et al., 2011). Recently, O'Leary et al. (2013), based on a combined molecular and morphological study, found support for a sister group relationship of Xenarthra to all other placental mammals (Fig. 1). Molecular evidence suggests that the clade arose about 100 Ma (million years ago) (Delsuc et al., 2004), which implies, given that xenarthrans are known with certainty only since the dawn of the Cenozoic (some 55 Ma during the Paleocene; Fig. 2), a “ghost” lineage that left no traces for nearly 50 million years. However, the most widely accepted scenario envisions the origin of the Xenarthra in South America following separation from Africa about 65–80 Ma. No doubt, together with the marsupials, xenarthrans are the mammals with the longest history in South America.

Figure1.

Summary of the phylogenetic relationships among the four major mammalian clades. A. Following Delsuc & Douzery (2008) and references therein, B. Following Asher & Helgen (2010). C. Following O'Leary et al. (2013).

Due to the later impressive diversification of the group, their fossils are among the most prominent and abundant in South America. It has been noted often that extant species of armadillos, sloths, and anteaters represent but a small fragment of a much more diverse fossil assemblage of xenarthrans that includes such well-known oddities as the glyptodonts and pampatheres related to armadillos within the Cingulata, and giant ground sloths within the Pilosa (which also includes anteaters). In contrast to the 13 extant genera (nine armadillos, two sloths and three anteaters), according to the already dated compilation by McKenna & Bell (1997), fossil forms representing more than 180 genera have been identified, including about 80 sloths and over 100 cingulates, 65 of which correspond to glyptodonts. Anteaters, on the other hand, have never been particularly abundant or diverse (McDonald et al., 2008). The number of xenarthran species would be, were they to be listed, even more astonishing, but we have refrained from counting them because they were based largely on typological methodology, which raises any minor morphological and metric difference to new species status, without attempting to evaluate that variation based on extant forms. This was particularly true in the last part of the 19th century, when most of them were named, but unfortunately this flawed methodology has begun to reappear in professional paleontological research over the past decade or two. For instance, a parataxonomy on the abundant and diverse carapace scutes of fossil cingulates has been generated that, so far, has been poorly checked against other features such as the cranial and postcranial skeleton (but see Fernicola et al., 2008; Fernicola & Porpino, 2012; De Iuliis et al., 2014). The phylogenetic analyses including extant and extinct xenarthrans that are followed in this contribution were performed by Gaudin (2004), Gaudin & Wible (2006), Fernicola (2008), and Porpino et al. (2010) (Fig. 3).

Figure2.

chronoiogic chart of the Cenozoic including the Santacrucian and Lujanian ages treated in this article.

The closure of the Central American Seaway that separated South from North America, by means of the Central American landmass, allowed xenarthrans to extend to the north. Although few xenarthran species live there now, fossils are found during the late Neogene and the Pleistocene (from ∼9 to 0.011 Ma) in Central and North America, and the Holocene in the Caribbean (till ∼0.005,000 Ma). Xenarthrans began to disappear from Central and North America after the so-called Great American Biotic Interchange (Stehli & Webb, 1985). In contrast to this, xenarthrans remained very diverse in South America until the end of the Pleistocene (∼0.011 Ma).

The remarkable diversity of fossil xenarthrans include many unique and, in some cases, bizarre anatomical features, such as, among others, a dentition with a strongly reduced tooth number in many forms, lack of enamel in adults and of deciduous teeth in almost all extant and extinct xenarthrans (see Castro et al., 2014; Ciancio et al., 2014), and absence of the tribosphenic cuspal pattern that characterizes other mammals. For these reasons, many past naturalists recognized xenarthrans, together with aardvarks (Tubulidentata) from Africa and pangolins (Pholidota) from Africa and Asia, as members of the group called Edentata (which has given its name to this newsletter). The name was coined by Vicq d'Azyr and Cuvier more than two centuries ago (Edentati Vicq d'Azyr, 1792) from the Latin for “toothless”, a characteristic that really applies only to vermilinguans and pangolins, which achieved this state independently. We have noted before that the reduced dentition produced in most naturalists, including some Xenarthra specialists, a heightened but mistaken sense of simplification and lack of diversification in the masticatory apparatus of the group. A modern perspective suggests quite the opposite: the combination of dental features that characterize xenarthrans might be seen as the key innovation for the ecological diversity subsequently developed among xenarthrans, breaking the mold of the tribosphenic condition that constrained the evolution of the other major clades of mammals (Vizcaíno, 2009). In some cases xenarthrans represent less extreme versions of patterns developed in other major clades of mammals (marsupials, afrotheres, euarchontoglires, and laurasiatheres) clearly predetermined by a tribosphenic dental morphology, whereas in others they represent unique novelties indicative of particular biological roles.

Figure3.

A. Cladogram summarizing relationships among major clades of xenarthrans. B. Cladogram summarizing relationships within cingulates, following Gaudin & Wible (2006), Fernicola (2008), and Porpino et al. (2010). Sketches of skulls in lateral view from top to bottom: Glyptodon sp. (Pleistocene glyptodontid); Proeutatus sp. (Miocene eutatine); Euphractus sexcinctus (extant euphractine); Tolypeutes matacus and Priodontes maximus (extant tolypeutines); Dasypus novemcinctus (extant dasypodine); Stegotherium sp. (Miocene dasypodine); Peltephilus sp. (Miocene peltephiline). C. Cladogram summarizing relationships within sloths, as proposed by Gaudin (2004). Sketches of skulls in lateral view from top to bottom: Choloepus sp. (extant megalonychid); Megatherium sp. (Pleistocene megatheriid); Hapalops sp. (Miocene megatherioid); Scelidotherium sp. (Pleistocene mylodontid); Bradypus sp. (extant bradypodid).

As paleobiologists, our group is interested in reconstructing extinct xenarthrans as living animals, describing their habitats, ecological roles, behaviors, and basic biology, and considering diversity in ecological terms rather than as taxonomic richness. In the following sections we will briefly provide two examples of the ecological diversity of xenarthrans in the geological past that largely surpass the one we know today.

Reconstructing past ecological diversity in xenarthrans

One important tool for inferring the habits of extinct forms is the principle of actualism, according to which past events are reconstructed by analogy with currently observable processes. Mammals are very diverse in present times and most of them have fossil representatives. Reciprocally, most fossil mammals can be assigned to extant orders. For these reasons paleomammalogists apply actualism with a rather restrictive criterion, assuming that extinct species had similar habits to their current relatives. However, the dramatically reduced diversity of extant xenarthrans relative to their fossil kin means that few living analogs are available for comparison with extinct forms. This has severely constrained, and in some cases even misled, the interpretation of the natural history of fossil xenarthrans (Vizcaíno et al., 2008). Also, as we mentioned above, xenarthrans evolved in relative isolation in South America during a good part of the Cenozoic and developed important dental, skeletal, and muscular peculiarities that markedly distinguish them from other mammals. Consequently, in many cases the latter are not reliable analogues either (Vizcaíno & De Iuliis, 2003 and references therein).

For xenarthrans, as well as in all vertebrate paleontology, the main sources of information are fossilized bones and teeth; the majority of our paleobiological information is derived from these data and a “form-function correlation approach” (Radinsky, 1987) applies. According to this principle, function can be inferred from form. If appropriate homologies are lacking, biological analogues must be used; if biological ones are not available, then mechanical analogues can be helpful. Functional morphology, biomechanics, and ecomorphology can be applied to interpret form-function relationships: functional morphology analyzes how form causes, allows, or restricts the functions an organism can perform; biomechanics studies the relationships between form and function using the principles of physics and engineering; and ecomorphology investigates form and function with regard to environment (Plotnick & Baumiller, 2000). Although, as mentioned before, actualism is problematic in studies of extinct xenarthrans, relationships between form and function in living species are still needed.

A basic protocol in paleobiological studies implies the definition of three biological attributes that are essential for each taxon: size, diet, and usage of substrate, including type of locomotion (Vizcaíno et al., 2008 and references therein). These allow the development of novel interpretations of xenarthran modes of life that, coupled with paleoenvironmental data (geology, paleoclimatology, and reconstruction of paleovegetation), provide insightful information on the paleoecological context in which these animals existed.

Xenarthrans in Patagonia during the Middle Miocene Climatic Optimum

The Middle Miocene Climatic Optimum (MMCO, approximately between 17 to 15 Ma) was a period of global warmth (perhaps as much as 4–5 °C warmer than today) punctuating the overall cooling trend that has characterized the last 50 million years. During this period, which coincides with the late Early Miocene, warm surface water transported southward by the Brazil Current extended subtropical conditions southward from Amazonia (Barron et al., 1985; Hodell & Kennett, 1985). Much of the Andean uplift had not yet occurred (Blisniuk et al., 2005; Ramos & Ghiglione, 2008), so Andean rain-shadow effects over Patagonia had not yet been established. The Patagonian climate must have been very dissimilar to that of today, unusual and without modern equivalents, given that seasonality in energy availability at ∼50°S latitude must have had an effect upon biotic productivity (Kaufman, 1995). By this time South American mammals had undergone diversification and ecological specialization in isolation from other continents (Simpson, 1980, Fariña et al., 2013). In southern Patagonia a fauna referred to by paleontologists as the Santacrucian developed. This fauna marked the peak of diversification achieved by mammals after the arrival of African primates and rodents, but before the arrival of most North American immigrants. Xenarthrans were a quintessential component of this fauna, and their diversity was surprising, particularly considering the limited geographic range.

Florentino Ameghino (1887) provided the first descriptions of Santacrucian xenarthrans. Among cingulates, he named 11 species of armadillos that are currently assigned to two families, and include the genera Peltephilus (Peltephilidae; Fig. 4A), Stegotherium (Dasypodidae, Dasypodinae), Prozaedyus, Vetelia, Proeutatus, and Stenotatus (Dasypodidae, Euphractinae). He also named two species of glyptodonts of the genus Propalaehoplophorus (Glyptodontidae, Propalaehoplophorinae). In subsequent years, he added three new genera of armadillos, the peltephilids Anantiosodon and Peltecoelus and the dasypodid Eodasypus, and four propalaehoplophorine glyptodonts, Asterostemma, Cochlops, Eucinepeltus (Fig. 4B), and Metopotoxus. This taxonomic arrangement has changed little since then. In our recent efforts to reconstruct the paleoecology of Santacrucian cingulates we confirmed that at least five genera of armadillos and four genera of glyptodonts were sympatric (Vizcaíno et al., 2012b) in the rocks that contain this fauna in the Atlantic coast of Patagonia.

Figure4.

cingulates from Santa Cruz Formation (Santacrucian, Early Miocene, Patagonia). A. Lateral and frontal view of the skull of the armadillo Peltephilus pumilus (MACN-A7784) housed in the Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturales “Bernardino Rivadavia”, Buenos Aires, Argentina and life reconstruction of a peltephilid by Néstor Toledo. B. Skull of the propalaehoplophorine glyptodont Eucinepeltus petesatus (MACN-A4758) housed in the Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturales “Bernardino Rivadavia”, Buenos Aires, Argentina, and life reconstruction of the propalaehoplophorine Cochlops muricatus by Marcelo Canevari.

Among Pilosa, several taxa from the Santacrucian coastal localities were originally referred to Vermilingua by Ameghino (1893, 1894, 1904), including nine species in the genera Adiastaltus, Plagiocoelus (Adiastaltidae), Anathitus (Anathitidae), Protamandua, Promyrmephagus (Myrmecophagidae), Argyromanis, and Orthoarthrus (Manidae Ameghino 1904: Mammalia incertae sedis following Mones 1986). According to the most recent overview, Protamandua rothi is the only species from the Santa Cruz Formation that can be confidently referred to Vermilingua and as a Myrmecophagidae, although other poorly known remains could belong to vermilinguans (McDonald et al., 2008).

Several other early workers erected a plethora of sloth genera and species. Despite the fact that many of these taxa are based on fragmentary remains and are thus poorly known, most Santacrucian genera are clearly identifiable taxonomic units. According to McKenna & Bell (1997) the following genera (all but one named by Ameghino), belonging to three families and four subfamilies, are recorded in the Santacrucian fauna of Patagonia: Eucholoeops and Megalonychotherium Scott (Megalonychidae), Hapalops (Fig. 5), Hyperleptus, Pelecyodon, Analcimorphus, and Schismotherium (Megatheriidae, Schismotheriinae); Planops and Prepotherium (Megatheriidae, Megatheriinae), and Nematherium and Analcitherium (Scelidotheriidae, Scelidotheriinae). Recent field work in the coastal exposures of the Santa Cruz Formation has yielded several nicely preserved specimens of Eucholoeops, Hapalops, Pelecyodon, Hyperleptus, and Nematherium (Bargo et al., 2012) that permit the undertaking of comprehensive systematic reviews (e.g., De Iuliis et al., 2014).

In summary, the taxonomic richness of Santacrucian xenarthrans in a single locality, on which a comprehensive paleoecological study was performed (Kay et al., 2012), comprises at least nine genera of cingulates in three families, one genus and family of anteater, and 11 genera in three families of sloths, for a total of 21 genera in seven families. This far surpasses the present total diversity in the continent as a whole (14 genera within five families).

Figure5.

Sloth from the Early Miocene Santa Cruz Formation (Santacrucian, Patagonia). Skull of the basal megatherioid Hapalops longiceps (YPM-VPPU 15523) housed in Yale Peabody Museum, New Haven, USA, and life reconstruction by Néstor Toledo.

As indicated above, paleobiological studies performed on these xenarthrans (Bargo et al., 2012; Vizcaíno et al., 2012b) include estimation of body mass, analysis of the limbs so as to infer substrate use, and studies of the masticatory apparatus to infer probable feeding habits. Body masses were calculated based on a variety of scaling models, allometric equations, multiple regressions, and geometric similarity. Substrate use was determined through morphometric and qualitative-comparative morphofunctional analyses, indices previously modeled in living dasypodids using morphogeometric analyses, and application of a strength indicator. Feeding habits were inferred from jaw biomechanics, the anatomy of the masticatory apparatus as a whole, the shape, arrangement, and wear patterns on teeth, and from ecomorphological analyses. The results of these studies can be summarized as follows.

Among cingulates (Vizcaíno et al., 2012b), all armadillos were in the range of medium-sized living armadillos, and all glyptodonts were larger than any living armadillo, slightly greater than 100 kg. Despite some variation in limb proportions, all armadillos were good diggers but none reached the degree of fossoriality found in the specialized living Chlamyphorus; all glyptodonts were non-fossorial. In contrast, the variation in the masticatory apparatus of the armadillos exceeds that in living species, denoting a broader range of specializations and strong niche partitioning among the fossil species. Inferred diets of fossil forms range from herbivory to strict myrmecophagy. Proeutatus species were omnivorous, showing the most specialized morphology known for a cingulate herbivore with an armadillo-like skull pattern. Stenotatus species may have been omnivorous; they are morphologically and ecologically intermediate between living euphractines and dasypodines, with some specialization towards insectivory. Prozaedyus species were perhaps omnivorous, with a preference for rotting flesh and larvae as well as cocoons of ants and / or termites — a diet comparable to that of small living euphractines. Stegotherium was clearly more specialized for a myrmecophagous diet than any living armadillo. Peltephilus may have specialized on roots or tubers, although scavenging habits cannot be ruled out. The degree of variation in the masticatory apparatus of glyptodonts does not show the range of morphological diversity present in contemporaneous armadillos; some morphological traits allowed us to identify some ecological partitioning within the category of selective feeding in relatively closed to closed habitats.

Among Pilosa (Bargo et al., 2012), the Santacrucian anteater Protamandua was a relatively small animal, about 6 kg, well suited for climbing and for scratch-digging the substrate in search for its preferred food, social insects. Various sloths were moderately large-sized forms, the largest reaching about 100 kg, with a locomotor pattern distinct from that of living sloths, instead resembling more that of vermilinguans and pangolins. The results suggest well-developed digging capabilities, but semi-arboreal habits cannot be ruled out. Megatherioid sloths were most likely leaf eaters. Mylodontids may have fed on more compact, three-dimensional, and fibrous food items such as the underground storage organs of plants. The semiarboreal habits suggested for anteaters and, probably, sloths indicate they lived in forests or that forested areas were present nearby.

Xenarthrans in the pampean region at the end of the pleistocene

From the middle Miocene/Pliocene, with the culmination of the separation process between Antarctica and South America, the establishment of the Circumpolar and Humboldt oceanic currents in their present trajectories produced higher temperatures and increased aridity in the subtropics. The final elevation of the Andes produced a rain shadow effect that, by the Plio/Pleistocene, caused fragmentation of the subtropical paleoflora and the spread of taxa of arid environments along the so-called “arid diagonal” that extends from the southeastern tip of the continent, across the Andes in central Chile, and continuing along the Pacific coast to near the Equator (Hinojosa & Villagrán, 1997; Villagrán & Hinojosa, 1997). The periodic climatic alternation of glacial and interglacial epochs during the middle and late Pleistocene dramatically modified the distribution, composition, and biomass of plant and animal communities in South America; dry and cold climate caused open areas to predominate in South America (Cione et al., 2003). As mentioned above, the volcanic Isthmus of Panama rose up during the last part of the Pliocene, bridging North and South America and allowing a bidirectional migration of fauna and flora between the continents. Xenarthrans crossed the bridge to the north and became abundant in North America. In South America, the success of herbivorous xenarthrans subsequent to the Interchange has been explained by their ability to avoid competition with northern placental lineages by evolving increased size (Vizcaíno et al., 2012a).

During the Quaternary (the last 2.58 Ma; Fig. 2) several lineages of South American mammals evolved gigantic body sizes. Among the more than 120 genera of mammals known, the estimated adult masses of about 40 exceeded 100 kg, about 20 of which were megaherbivores (Vizcaíno et al., 2012a). Certainly, no other fossil mammalian fauna is known to have contained such a diversity of megaherbivores (i.e., above one ton of body mass). But even more interesting for this contribution is that most of them were xenarthrans.

In central Argentina, in the Pampean Region in particular, the basis of the so-called Lujanian Age (∼0.130 to 0.07 Ma) was established. The total mammalian richness during Lujanian times may have been as high as 286 genera. According to Cione et al. (2009), the total large mammal (and megamammal) diversity present during Lujanian times could have been as high as 83 species distributed in 48 genera. At least four genera of glyptodonts within the family Glyptodontidae (Glyptodon, Plaxhaplous, Doedicurus and Panochthus; Fig. 6) reached body masses varying between one and two tons. Among ground sloths, five genera in two families weighed more than one ton: Glossotherium, Mylodon (Fig. 7), Scelidotherium, Lestodon (Mylodontidae), and Megatherium (Megatheriidae); the last two reaching up to three or four tons. There were also two armadillos (Eutatus and Propraopus, Dasypodidae: Eutatinae and Dasypodinae, respectively) of about 50 kg and one pampathere (Pampatherium, Pampatheriidae), a giant armadillo-like herbivore that must have reached 200 kg. Xenarthrans alone constitute about 80% of the mammals above 500 kg (the other putative Lujanian xenarthrans are armadillos of the extant genera Dasypus, Chaetophractus, Zaedyus, Euphractus, Tolypeutes, and Chlamyphorus). The other mammals above 500 kg were two native ungulates (Notoungulata and Litopterna) and one gomphothere (Proboscidea). Immigrant ungulates, artiodactyls and perissodactyls, were all smaller than one ton, mostly less than 500 kg (Vizcaíno et al., 2012a).

The total number of mammalian herbivore species larger than a ton in the Lujanian is even more impressive than in present-day African faunas; as many as 19 such species occur in a single locality (Fariña & Vizcaíno, 1999). This seems to be too much for the flora that had to support them (Fariña, 1996). However, as mentioned before, megaherbivores were dominated by xenarthrans, which are characterized by their low metabolism and, consequently, lower energetic requirements than other placentals. Therefore, for a specific type of food they required lower intake than other placental mammals of similar body masses (Vizcaíno et al., 2006). Certainly, this ecological scenario has no counterpart in living faunas.

Nonetheless, xenarthran diversity was ultimately reduced as all of these giant forms suffered the widespread extinction event at the very end of the Pleistocene and the beginning of the Holocene, although they were the only megamammals that seem to have survived it very briefly (Gutierrez et al., 2010). All megamammals (37 species) and most large mammals (46 species) present during the Lujanian became extinct in South America (Cione et al., 2003, 2009). As most megamammals in South America were xenarthrans, most megamamals affected by extinction in this continent were xenarthrans (albeit litopterns and notoungulates also became extinct).

Figure6.

Glyptodont from the Late Pleistocene-Early Holocene Luján Formation (Lujanian, Pampean Region). Skull of Panochthus tuberculatus (MLP 1) mounted at the exhibition hall of the Museo de La Plata, La Plata, Argentina in frontal and lateral view, and life reconstruction by Néstor Toledo.

Although the impact of the extinction of the giant xenarthrans (and other megamammals) on the evolution of present plant communities has not been studied for South America, it clearly produced an enormous ecological gap in the herbivorous guild that may have affected plant communities (Galliari & Goin, 1993). As in other continents (Johnson, 2002, 2009), the ecological aftershocks of those extinctions persist today.

Concluding remarks

We have addressed two moments during the Cenozoic in southern South America (one in Patagonia and the other in the Pampean Region) in which xenarthran taxonomic richness and ecological diversity was much higher than today; even north to the Tropic of Capricorn, where most of the present richness and diversity accumulates.

Figure7.

Ground sloth from the Late Pleistocene-Early Holocene Luján Formation (Lujanian, Pampean Region). A. Skull of Mylodon darwini (CN 43) housed in the Zoologisk Museum in Copenhagen, Denmark, and life reconstruction by Néstor Toledo.

Irremediably, those that are gone will never come back, unless molecular technology is able to clone them in some distant future. But even so, we (or, most probably, our descendants) would face the ethical conundrum of inserting them in modern ecosystems or keeping them as lab animals, zoo beasts or circus freaks.

In conservation terms, xenarthrans have been effectively invisible for a variety of reasons (Aguiar & Fonseca, 2008). This may change if a historical perspective with a geological time scale is applied. In a volume proposing environmental policies for Argentina, Galliari & Goin (1993) produced a largely ignored approach to the assessment of methodologies for conservation priorities of mammals that they called a “historical method.” For the purposes of their analysis, they considered a measure of the age of the different lineages of mammals in South America as an “index of South American autochthony” or “index of time endemism”, to recognize the intrinsic value (the uniqueness or oneness) of in situ evolution of the South American mammalian fauna. Because of its great antiquity and differentiation in South America, Galliari & Goin (1993) found that armadillos reach a very high “rate of time endemism”, which should translate into high priority in terms of conservation value.

Hence, by protecting armadillos, sloths and anteaters we are protecting the most representative lineage of mammals of South America on more than just its present faunal record. Consequently, we urge that autochthony and past taxonomic richness and ecologic diversity be recognized as values for establishing conservation priorities and policies at a continental scale.

Acknowledgements

We are thankful to Mariella Superina and Agustín Abba for their invitation to write this contribution, to Mariella Superina, Gerry De Iuliis, and Jim Loughry for their comments and corrections on the manuscript, and to Néstor Toledo for providing his drawings. This is contribution to the projects UNLP 11/N750 and ANPCyT PICT 2013-0389.

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Sergio F. Vizcaíno and M. Susana Bargo "Loss of Ancient Diversity of Xenarthrans and the Value of Protecting Extant Armadillos, Sloths and Anteaters," Edentata 15(2014), 27-38, (1 December 2014). https://doi.org/10.5537/020.015.0111
Received: 4 November 2014; Accepted: 8 November 2014; Published: 1 December 2014
KEYWORDS
conservación
conservation
diversidad ecológica
ecological diversity
extinct xenarthrans
riqueza taxonómica
taxonomic richness
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