Cuesta sea cow
The Cuesta sea cow is an extinct herbivorous marine mammal and is the direct ancestor of the Steller's sea cow. They reached up to in length, making them among the biggest sirenians to have ever lived. They were first described in 1978 by Daryl Domning when fossils in California were unearthed. Its appearance and behavior are largely based on that of the well-documented Steller's sea cow, which, unlike the Cuesta sea cow, lived into the modern era and was well-described.
Taxonomy and extinction
The fossils of the Cuesta sea cow were first discovered in the Late Pliocene sediment formations of Pismo Beach, California in 1978, and successive finds of the species were unearthed elsewhere in California. In 1988, fossils of sea cows were discovered in Hokkaido that were originally assigned to the Takikawa sea cow, a newly-described species, but this is thought of by some scientists as a synonym of H. cuestae. It is uncertain whether or not H. spissa was simply a local variant of H. cuestae or a completely separate lineage. The Steller's sea cow was apparently a direct descendant of the Cuesta sea cow. H. spissa and H. gigas have demonstrated to be related but different by the cerebrum shape, and optic nerve positions. The optic nerve separates from the trigeminal nerve. These differences were able to depict differences between the Hydrodamalinae that inhibited different areas of the Pacific Ocean. The H. spissa inhibiting the western Pacific and the H. cuestae, inhibiting the eastern Pacific.The Cuesta sea cow went extinct around 2½ million years ago. Its disappearance was likely linked to the onset of the Quaternary glaciation; the availability of the sea cows’ main food source, seagrasses, likely decreased due to the cooling of the oceans, disappearing to the point where the sea cow’s entire species simply could not sustain itself. In addition, the Cuesta sea cow was not adapted to colder waters; those animals that did survive probably became the ancient ancestors of the Steller's sea cow.