Haploidoceros
Haploidoceros is an extinct genus of deer that lived in Europe during from the late Middle Pleistocene to early Late Pleistocene. It contains a single species, Haploidoceros mediterraneus. It had a distribution limited to southern France and the Iberian Peninsula.
Taxonomy
Haploidoceros was described in 2008. Its remains were originally assigned to the genus Euctenoceros, though examination of the cranial proportions and morphology show it is distinct. Analysis of its antlers has led some authors to suggest that it descended from the genus Arvernoceros, which is closely related and sometimes considered a subgenus of Rucervus, which contains the living barasinga.Description
Haploidoceros was a medium-sized deer weighing around. Its hind limbs were especially well-developed, indicating it was a good jumper who possibly moved in a bounding gait. Its unique antlers were split into two beams adorned with a single tip at the end. The posterior beam was sickle-shaped, while the front beam was comparatively shorter and straighter.Paleoecology
Haploidoceros favored temperate climates. It probably lived in forests to semi-open woodland. Tooth wear analysis suggests that it was a mixed feeder, with a preference for browsing on leaves, similar to that of living European fallow deer, shifting from browse dominated mixed feeding during the Middle Pleistocene to browsing during the Late Pleistocene. It lived alongside a variety of other ungulates, such as equids, rhinoceroses, wild boar, aurochs and the straight-tusked elephant.Sites containing fossils of Haploidoceros mediterraneus are notable in their absence of fallow deer remains, despite the species being common in other nearby sites in the time period. It is believed that the niches of these deer were too similar for both to occupy the same area. Both species avoided competition by choosing different habitats; Haploidoceros favoring woodland and the fallow deer staying in more open areas.